News

Heather K. Gerken, dean of Yale Law School for eight years and the incoming president of the Ford Foundation, will become a Yale professor emerita.
EVO, which marks its 20th anniversary this year, annually provides about 100 local students experiences and instruction intended to inspire a passion for STEM fields (science, technology, engineering, ...
A new initiative will help Yale School of Nursing become a national leader in intellectual and developmental disabilities health care education.
Yale physicist Helen Caines has arrived at a key juncture in her long campaign to understand the “critical point” and the “strong force” of nuclear matter. In the subatomic realm, the universe’s ...
The Roman Emperor Caligula, notorious for his blood lust, may have had a strong general knowledge of medicine, according to a new study.
Yale’s Jill Jarvis discusses the role of literature in “decolonizing” memory in Algeria and the intellectual journey that ultimately led her to North Africa.
“The World in Maps 1400–1600” features some of the library’s most impressive and historically important maps from the late Medieval and Early Modern periods.
A saliva-based laboratory diagnostic test developed by researchers at the Yale School of Public Health to determine whether someone is infected with the novel coronavirus has been granted an emergency ...
Elizabeth Hinton, one of the nation’s leading experts on policing and mass incarceration in the United States, was recently appointed the Class of 1954 Professor of History and Black Studies, ...
A new study calculates the inequitable health care outcomes and delayed treatment for Black Americans using the estimated glomerular filtration rate system.
A new Yale study suggests women with high blood pressure before and during pregnancy may benefit from targeted interventions to support breastfeeding.
The American Indian Sovereignty Project brings together scholars and students to study, research, and engage American Indian law and policy.