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University College London


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Campus - Career - 02.05.2025
Staff Experience Survey 2024: Institutional survey results and next steps
Staff Experience Survey 2024: Institutional survey results and next steps
An update on our progress towards driving improvements in the four key areas identified in the survey, a report on the institutional survey results, and what to expect next.

Campus - 02.05.2025
Let us know what you'd like to ask UCL's Provost and your Students' Union President
Let us know what you’d like to ask UCL’s Provost and your Students’ Union President

Environment - Politics - 01.05.2025
The idea that natural resource extraction can build peace has been around for decades
The idea that natural resource extraction can build peace has been around for decades

Campus - Pedagogy - 01.05.2025
Announcing the 2025 Education Awards shortlist
Announcing the 2025 Education Awards shortlist

Health - Psychology - 01.05.2025
Help shape support for students affected by war, conflict, or disaster - Join a focus group
Help shape support for students affected by war, conflict, or disaster - Join a focus group

Career - 01.05.2025
Updated MyAppraisal FAQs and extended appraisal deadline
Updated MyAppraisal FAQs and extended appraisal deadline

Life Sciences - Psychology - 30.04.2025
Opinion: I've seen the impact of harsh words on children's brains. We need to prevent verbal abuse
Opinion: I’ve seen the impact of harsh words on children’s brains. We need to prevent verbal abuse

Health - Life Sciences - 30.04.2025
Cutting-edge genomic technology saves woman's eyesight
Cutting-edge genomic technology saves woman’s eyesight
A new metagenomic test developed by researchers at UCL and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children (GOSH) is providing clinical teams around the country with vital information about rare infections - allowing for patients to access targeted treatments they desperately need.

Campus - 30.04.2025
New Admissions Dashboard: Know what to use, when
New Admissions Dashboard: Know what to use, when

Campus - Politics - 30.04.2025
UCL hosts landmark Government Evaluation Conference
UCL hosts landmark Government Evaluation Conference

Psychology - Health - 29.04.2025
Survey reveals the painful realities of ketamine addiction
Survey reveals the painful realities of ketamine addiction
Writing in The Conversation, PhD Candidate Rebecca Harding (UCL Division of Psychology and Language Sciences) explores some of the realities of ketamine addiction. Ketamine's  rising popularity has created a paradox. While it's hailed by some doctors as a breakthrough psychiatric treatment, it's also driving a surge in addiction and  harming people's health.

Event - History & Archeology - 29.04.2025
UCL archaeologist wins one of China's highest literature awards
UCL archaeologist wins one of China’s highest literature awards

Life Sciences - Health - 29.04.2025
How resilient nerve cells fight back against dementia
How resilient nerve cells fight back against dementia
A UCL research team has found clues as to why some nerve cells die in dementia and not others, in a new study in fruit flies. The Alzheimer's Research study, published in Cell Reports , is helping to answer one of the biggest questions in dementia research, which is crucial to finding new treatments to slow or stop the condition from developing.

Campus - 29.04.2025
Navigating the Quad: Upcoming access changes
Navigating the Quad: Upcoming access changes

Economics - Innovation - 28.04.2025
UCL graduates and students feature in nine Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe categories
UCL graduates and students feature in nine Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe categories

Environment - Politics - 28.04.2025
India and Pakistan tension escalates with suspension of historic water treaty
India and Pakistan tension escalates with suspension of historic water treaty
The question of shared rivers is now entangled with the larger, and escalating, dispute between India and Pakistan, writes Dr Daniel Haines (UCL Risk and Disaster Reduction) in The Conversation.

Psychology - 28.04.2025
UCL experts call for urgent action on childhood verbal abuse at House of Commons

Environment - Earth Sciences - 28.04.2025
Geoengineering technique could cool planet using existing aircraft
Geoengineering technique could cool planet using existing aircraft
A technique to cool the planet, in which particles are added to the atmosphere to reflect sunlight, would not require developing special aircraft but could be achieved using existing large planes, according to a new modelling study led by UCL researchers. Previously, most research has assumed that the technique, known as stratospheric aerosol injection, would be deployed in the tropics and so would require specially designed aircraft capable of flying at altitudes of 20km or more to inject the particles.

Health - Psychology - 25.04.2025
Belgium's euthanasia trends dispute 'slippery slope' argument
Belgium’s euthanasia trends dispute ’slippery slope’ argument
Writing in The Conversation, Dr Jacques Wels (UCL MRC Unit for Lifelong Health & Ageing) explores Belgium's euthanasia trends and the lessons that can be learned, from regulation to the importance of robust data monitoring from the outset.

Innovation - Economics - 25.04.2025
Unlock your potential: Register for Innovate and Create events in our ExtendEd Learning programme
Unlock your potential: Register for Innovate and Create events in our ExtendEd Learning programme

Social Sciences - 25.04.2025
Information following UK Supreme Court ruling on legal definitions of sex within the Equality Act
Information following UK Supreme Court ruling on legal definitions of sex within the Equality Act

Health - Pharmacology - 25.04.2025
UCL spinout Autolus gains UK licence for cancer therapy
UCL spinout Autolus gains UK licence for cancer therapy

Computer Science - 23.04.2025
Female lobbyists more likely to get access to EU legislators

Health - Life Sciences - 23.04.2025
Smart brain implants are helping people with Parkinson's and other disorders
Smart brain implants are helping people with Parkinson’s and other disorders
Writing in The Conversation, Professor Vlasimir Litvak (UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology) discusses how advances in adaptive deep brain stimulation are being used to treat Parkinson's. Although the brain is our most complex organ, the ways to treat it have historically been rather simple. Typically, surgeons lesioned (damaged) a structure or a pathway in the hope that this would "correct the imbalance" that led to the disease.

Health - Pharmacology - 23.04.2025
New system could help reduce unnecessary surgery to prevent strokes
New system could help reduce unnecessary surgery to prevent strokes
Researchers at UCL have tested a new scoring system to measure the risk of stroke in patients with narrowed arteries due to atherosclerosis, which could prevent unnecessary surgeries and stents. Atherosclerosis is a condition where the blood vessels become narrowed and hardened due to the buildup of plaque, including in the carotid arteries, which carry blood from the heart to the brain.

Politics - Campus - 23.04.2025
Harvard is suing the White House: here's what Trump hopes to achieve by targeting universities
Harvard is suing the White House: here’s what Trump hopes to achieve by targeting universities

Health - Life Sciences - 16.04.2025
Common genetic variants linked to drug-resistant epilepsy
Certain common genetic changes might make some people with focal epilepsy less responsive to seizure medications, finds a new global study led by researchers at UCL and UTHealth Houston. Focal epilepsy is a condition where seizures start in one part of the brain. It is the most common type of epilepsy.

Health - 15.04.2025
UCL eye specialist helps save sight of 24 wounded Bangladeshi students
UCL eye specialist helps save sight of 24 wounded Bangladeshi students

Career - Politics - 15.04.2025
Spotlight on... Dr Punam Yadav
Spotlight on... Dr Punam Yadav

Career - Innovation - 14.04.2025
Engineer awarded prestigious quantum fellowship
Engineer awarded prestigious quantum fellowship

Environment - 14.04.2025
Accra is a tough city to walk in: how city planners can fix the problem
Accra is a tough city to walk in: how city planners can fix the problem
Dr Daniel Oviedo Hernandez and Maria Nieto Combariza (both UCL Bartlett Development Planning Unit) explain how many African cities are not friendly to pedestrians in The Conversation.

Health - Pharmacology - 11.04.2025
Commentary: Measles outbreaks in US and Canada show that MMR vaccines are needed more than ever

Health - 11.04.2025
Increase in alcohol deaths in England an 'acute crisis'
Increase in alcohol deaths in England an ’acute crisis’
The persistent higher rate of alcohol deaths in England since the pandemic in 2020 is an "acute crisis" requiring urgent action from government, according to a new study led by researchers at UCL and the University of Sheffield.

Campus - 11.04.2025
UniForum: What we've learned so far and reminder of second survey in May
UniForum: What we’ve learned so far and reminder of second survey in May
Read about some of the key findings from the programme so far, how your feedback is informing UCL's strategic priorities, and what to expect from the Service Effectiveness Survey Part 2 in May.

Career - 11.04.2025
MyAppraisal: Frequently asked questions
MyAppraisal: Frequently asked questions

Campus - Career - 10.04.2025
Copy call for September 2026 Postgraduate Prospectus moved forwards
Copy call for September 2026 Postgraduate Prospectus moved forwards

Campus - 10.04.2025
The Postgraduate Research Experience Survey (PRES) closes soon
The Postgraduate Research Experience Survey (PRES) closes soon

Innovation - 10.04.2025
Free will writing service now available to all staff
Free will writing service now available to all staff

Health - Pharmacology - 10.04.2025
UCL cemented as global leader in developing and trialling advanced medicinal therapies
UCL cemented as global leader in developing and trialling advanced medicinal therapies

Environment - Event - 09.04.2025
Gather & Gather unveils vibrant new Spring/Summer menu inspired by global flavours
Gather & Gather unveils vibrant new Spring/Summer menu inspired by global flavours

Campus - Career - 09.04.2025
Inaugural UCL-South Africa fellowship empowers researchers to promote their work
Inaugural UCL-South Africa fellowship empowers researchers to promote their work

Economics - 09.04.2025
Researcher to lead South Africa's G20 economic growth taskforce
Researcher to lead South Africa’s G20 economic growth taskforce

Health - Sport - 09.04.2025
High levels of oral disease identified among academy football players
High levels of oral disease identified among academy football players
Young footballers have significantly worse oral health and disease than others of a similar age, finds a new study of elite English football academies led by UCL researchers. The study, published in the BMJ Open Sport and Exercise Medicine , found higher levels of oral disease in both male and female players, with causal factors including poor oral hygiene (brushing/flossing), sugary sports and fizzy drink consumption, and stress (possibly due to a high-performance environment) that can cause teeth grinding and lead to decay.

Economics - Campus - 09.04.2025
UCL financial performance update 2023/24
UCL financial performance update 2023/24

Law - 09.04.2025
Hungary's exit from the International Criminal Court is a sign of the times
Hungary’s exit from the International Criminal Court is a sign of the times

Environment - 08.04.2025
Spotlight on... Gema Amaya Santos
Spotlight on... Gema Amaya Santos

Campus - 08.04.2025
Launch of the Services Simplification SharePoint
Launch of the Services Simplification SharePoint

Innovation - Environment - 07.04.2025
Here's how to create a more nature-literate society
Here’s how to create a more nature-literate society
Writing in The Conversation, Professor Seirian Sumner (UCL Biosciences) argues that having the language to name and describe nature is a gateway to curiosity-driven innovation, creativity and discovery.

Art & Design - Campus - 07.04.2025
William Wilkins visits UCL campus
William Wilkins visits UCL campus

Environment - Health - 07.04.2025
Exposure to air pollution may harm brain health of older adults
Exposure to air pollution may harm brain health of older adults
Long-term exposure to high levels of air pollution may harm the brain health of older adults in England, finds a new study led by UCL researchers. The research, published in The Journals of Gerontology: Series A , found that exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ) and fine particulate matter (PM 2.5 ) is linked to lower scores in key cognitive abilities, particularly language skills.