News

Hauser Honored with Lifetime Achievement Award for Transportation Research

UNC Charlotte researcher Edd Hauser, director of the Center for Transportation Policy Studies and the Center for Disaster Studies, recently received the academic Lifetime Achievement in Transportation Research and Education Award from the Council of University Transportation Centers.

Film About Cold War Experiences Premieres in Major Festival

A documentary that recounts the Cold War struggles of Mario Röllig, UNC Charlotte “CLAS Eyewitness in Residence” will premiere this week during the 66th Berlin International Film Festival. The film includes scenes filmed during a visit Röllig made to UNC Charlotte in 2014.

Emma Frantz (right) with fellow student

Odyssean Scholar’s Perspective Shifts During Study Abroad

A semester in Spain taught UNC Charlotte political science major and Odyssean scholar Emma Frantz that exposure to different political and cultural practices can broaden the mind.

Research Readiness: Undergraduates Work With Professors

Hundreds of UNC Charlotte undergraduates have participated in the Charlotte Research Scholars initiative at UNC Charlotte in a 10-week summer program. Those chosen receive a scholarship to work closely with faculty mentors conducting research and participate in professional development sessions to better prepare them for graduate school and careers.

UNC Charlotte Model UN team at SRMUN-Atlanta

Model UN Continues to Build Legacy, Academic Focus

The UNC Charlotte Model United Nations team continues to build its legacy after successfully competing in two conferences last semester, earning top awards at each. These successes and expansions in the program continue a winning record and set the stage for the future.

Cary (left) visits Budapest with a fellow student in her program.

Odyssean Scholar Encounters People from Diverse Walks of Life

Amidst the rolling hills of the Covadonga Valley in Spain, UNC Charlotte history major and Odyssean Scholarship recipient Keegan Cary came to understand the serendipity of encounters with people from different walks of life.

Mars Research Expands Insights Into Earth’s Surface Processes

The drive to learn how the sun weathers rock has taken UNC Charlotte earth scientist Martha-Cary “Missy” Eppes to great lengths – to the arid deserts of the Southwest, the periglacial boulder fields of Pennsylvania and Virginia, and even to the surface of Mars. Mechanical weathering, the physical means by which rock is broken into smaller fragments, is one of the primary processes that defines Earth as we know it. Without it, there would be no erosion, no soil, no sediment from which resources like water and oil can be readily drawn, and no ready access to rock nutrients that are required by flora and in turn, fauna.

2015 Mount Zion excavation site as seen from Jerusalem's city wall.

Mount Zion Excavation Reveals Tale of Many Civilizations

Jerusalem, rich in culture, history and historical conflict, is the spiritual capital of the Western world. Since 2007, a large, complex archaeological excavation has been conducted there under the direction of UNC Charlotte in an archaeological investigation perhaps unlike any other.

Best Face Forward: Research Considers Dynamics of Relationships

The phrase “putting your best face forward” takes on significance in the work of UNC Charlotte researcher Amy Canevello, an assistant professor of psychology who studies the dynamics of relationships

Japanese Faculty Member Honored for Promoting Japan – U.S. Friendship

Fumie Kato, associate professor of Japanese at UNC Charlotte, has been honored by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan for outstanding achievements in promoting friendship between Japan and the United States.