UC student finds passion in community building
June 25, 2020
DaManuel Montgomery wants to leave a mark on the world. He found a way to do that in UC’s School of Human Services
June 25, 2020
DaManuel Montgomery wants to leave a mark on the world. He found a way to do that in UC’s School of Human Services
August 21, 2020
At least 20 people were shot, five fatally, in several separate incidents in Cincinnati the weekend of Aug. 17. In examining one of the city’s most violent weekends on record, CityBeat magazine turned to the research of University of Cincinnati criminologist John Eck.
August 18, 2020
University of Cincinnati criminologist Robin Engel, a nationally renowned expert on policing policy, is one of 12 community and criminal justice leaders from across the state to serve on the Ohio Collaborative Community-Police Advisory Board.
August 17, 2020
More than 70,000 area K-12 students will soon resume their school lives in Butler County amid a very different school atmosphere, reports the Journal-News. In examining how COVID-19 will affect the lives of Butler County students, it turned to Laura Dell, associate dean for the University of Cincinnati’s School of Education.
August 11, 2020
The Journal-News examines how local parents are making the decision whether to send kids back to the classroom or to choose virtual online learning. They talk to UC's Sarah Schroeder, director of the Learning Design Collaborative in the College of Education.
August 5, 2020
The Business Courier spotlights the donation received by the UC College of Law of $200,000 from alumnus Bill Morelli.
August 5, 2020
University of Cincinnati criminologist Robin Engel talks to NPR about how reformist police chiefs are navigating activist calls for social justice.
August 6, 2020
In examining why Cincinnati police use-of-force reports have declined, the Enquirer turns to University of Cincinnati criminologist Robin Engel, a renowned expert on policing policy.
University of Cincinnati epidemiologist Diego Cuadros is used to telling people what they don’t want to hear. The assistant professor runs the Health Geography and Disease Modeling Lab in UC’s College of Arts and Sciences, where he studies global topics such as HIV, malaria and, this year, COVID-19. He condenses data into easy-to-follow maps that predict the future with uncanny accuracy.
Carl Fichtenbaum, a professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine and one of the leaders in UC’s efforts to combat COVID-19, is still going to protest marches as his passion for social justice, personally and profession- ally, burns as brightly as ever.