Media Coverage

  • The Mercury News

    Mercury News

    Lick Observatory: Unraveling cosmic mysteries from an otherworldly ‘little town’

    Piper Walker, 22, an astrophysics major at UC Santa Cruz, collaborates remotely with researchers at Lick Observatory. Walker, from her Santa Cruz bedroom, even helped identify her first quasar.

  • Los Angeles Daily News

    Los Angeles Daily News

    Boeing to extract badly tainted soil from ‘burn pit’ at Santa Susana Field

    Dan Hirsch, former director of the Program on Environmental and Nuclear Policy at the University of California, Santa Cruz, spent decades advocating for the cleanup of the Santa Susana Field Lab, known as one of the most contaminated fields in the U.S. Along with other activists, Hirsch worried that weak toxic clean-up standards set by the California Department…

  • Popular Science

    Popular Science

    When planting trees is bad for the planet

    Popular Science reached out to Environmental Studies Professor Karen Holl for her perspective on a new study about the risks of planting trees in places where they wouldn't grow naturally. 

  • King City Rustler

    King City Rustler

    New study focuses on ‘Building an Inclusive Economy’ in Monterey Bay region

    The King City Rustler covered the release of a new report developed by UC Santa Cruz's Institute for Social Transformation that shares indicators for tracking inclusive economic development. “Accurate data is important for grounding discussions about challenges and opportunities we face in the region,” said Chris Benner, faculty director of the institute. 

  • Hindustan Times

    Hindustan Times

    American Dream: Haryana youngsters queue up big time on the US border

    Hindustan Times interviewed Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh about the economic factors driving migration to the United States from the state of Haryana in India.

  • New York Times

    The New York Times

    For Gen Z, an Age-Old Question: Who Pays for Dates?

    The New York Times interviewed Distinguished Psychology Professor Campbell Leaper about his 2016 research that found an association among men between the idea that men should pay for dates and hostile views toward women. 

  • KPBS

    KPBS

    Tips for parents to encourage kids to play outside

    Sociology Professor Rebecca London shared tips with KPBS about how parents can encourage children's play. Parents can model different kinds of play for their children and should follow their children's natural interests, London says. 

  • Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Boulder Creek resident’s film on aging, staying active to air on KQED Plus

    The Santa Cruz Sentinel covered the release of an upcoming documentary featuring UC Santa Cruz Professor Emeritus of Sociology John Brown Childs. 

  • Financial Express

    Financial Express

    Lessons from China’s EV success

    Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh wrote an opinion article for Financial Express about lessons India could learn from China's success with manufacturing and selling electric vehicles.

  • KPBS

    KPBS

    The way kids play has quietly transformed. Here’s why that matters

    Sociology Professor Rebecca London spoke with KPBS about her research on the benefits of free play for children's development. 

  • KALW logo

    KALW

    Yurok, Klamath & Karuk Native tribes celebrate historic dam removals

    Environmental Studies Ph.D. student Brook Thompson, a member of the Yurok and Karuk tribes, joined KALW's Your Call radio show to discuss the removal of the Klamath River dam.

  • National Geographic

    National Geographic

    Why your dog helps you relax more than your friends do

    Assistant Teaching Professor of Psychology Hannah Raila spoke with National Geographic about her recent research that documented how people who interacted with their dogs after a stressful experience had a greater boost in mood and a greater reduction in anxiety than those who tried to destress by coloring or just through the passage of time. 

Last modified: Feb 20, 2024