Media Coverage

  • Radio New Zealand

    Radio New Zealand

    Our Changing World: Lead bullets – a health risk to humans and kea

    Myra Finkelstein is an adjunct professor in the microbiology and environmental toxicology department at the University of California Santa Cruz and a world-leading researcher in the detection and impacts of lead on human and animal health. Myra's pioneering work with California condor has shown that the ingestion of lead from lead-based ammunition is preventing the…

  • New York Times

    New York Times

    Gaming’s Uneven Progress Toward Diverse Female Figures

    Soraya Murray, a professor of Film and Digital Media here at UC Santa Cruz, was interviewed about female representation in video games. Women are often overtly sexualized in video games, and there have been calls for more diversity in the gaming industry.

  • Mongabay logo

    Mongabay

    Largest dam removal ever, driven by Tribes, kicks off Klamath River recovery

    Environmental studies Ph.D. student, artist, and Yurok Tribe restoration engineer Brooke Thompson celebrated dam removal on the Klamath River. “This has been 20-plus years in the making, my entire life, and why I went to university, why I’m doing the degrees I’m doing now,” she said. “I feel amazing. I feel like the weight of…

  • Lookout Santa Cruz

    Lookout Santa Cruz

    Building brighter futures in Santa Cruz County: Join us in building homes, communities, and hope!

    Habitat for Humanity Monterey Bay shared findings from a collaborative study with UC Santa Cruz's Center for Economic Justice and Action on the improvements in economic stability, mental and physical well-being, family relationships, and community involvement that come from receiving housing. 

  • High Country News

    High Country News

    Migrating birds find refuge in pop-up habitats

    A program that pays rice farmers to create wetland habitats is a rare conservation win, and UC Santa Cruz conservation ecologist Natalia Ocampo-Peñuela explains why. “We thought we could rely on protected areas to conserve habitat globally, and we now know that’s not enough, and we need to complement that with a suite of different conservation strategies,”…

  • AFP/France 24

    AFP/France 24

    British skull auction sparks Indian demand for return

    UC Santa Cruz Anthropologist and Director of the Center for South Asian Studies Dolly Kikon recently helped stop the sale of Indigenous remains and demanded repatriation. Kikon is a member of the Recover Restore and Decolonise (RRaD) initiative, which works to return ancestor remains to their rightful communities.

  • KQED

    KQED

    Uber and Lyft’s Appeal in California Labor Case Won’t Be Heard by Supreme Court

    The Supreme Court's decision to kick a case on pay and benefits for gig workers back to state courts means there’s a continuing lack of clarity, according to UC Santa Cruz Sociology Professor Steve McKay, who directs the university’s Center for Labor and Community. “When we have a system where employers pay for a lot…

  • Seattle Times

    Seattle Times

    Two WA men were arrested in mental health crises. Only one survived

    Across the country, jails have become “the default placement” for people in mental crisis, said Craig Haney, a University of California, Santa Cruz, psychology professor. “In worst-case scenarios, that can have fatal consequences,” because mentally ill people “oftentimes react badly to the oppressive nature” of jail environments, Haney said.

  • The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education

    The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education

    New faculty appointments for six black scholars

    New art and photography professor Jonathan Jackson included in a list honoring black faculty in higher education. Jonathan Jackson has joined the faculty at the University of California, Santa Cruz as an assistant professor of photography.

  • CBS Bay Area

    CBS News

    Scientists say they've made a breakthrough in efforts to bring back the extinct Tasmanian tiger

    Colossal Biosciences in a Thursday press release said its reconstructed thylacine genome is about 99.9% complete, with 45 gaps that they'll work to close through additional sequencing in the coming months. … "The thylacine samples used for our new reference genome are among the best preserved ancient specimens my team has worked with," said Beth…

  • Daily Mail

    Daily Mail

    Global warming is NOT surging, scientists say

    The team stress that a surge in global warming may be happening – just that it's not detectable yet. "Of course, it is still possible that an acceleration in global warming is occurring," said lead author Claudie Beaulieu, a professor of ocean sciences at UC Santa Cruz. "But we found that the magnitude of the…

  • Yahoo News

    Yahoo News

    Incredible discovery on deep ocean floor: 'Could not believe our eyes'

    Andrew Fisher, a hydrogeologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz wasn't involved in the study, but he explained why the incredible breakthrough has important implications when it comes to cosmic exploration such as that on Europa, Jupiter's moon. "Where there is space, life often finds a place to take hold," Fisher said. "When probes…

Last modified: Oct 28, 2024