Green gentrification cycle: Double-edged sword of environmental justice
Building green spaces in disinvested communities can promote health and economic gains. It might also displace the residents who need it most.
Read MoreBuilding green spaces in disinvested communities can promote health and economic gains. It might also displace the residents who need it most.
Read MoreUtah is experiencing significant demographic shifts as it continues to be one of the fastest-growing states in the nation.
Read MoreU researchers track the spread of nonnative balsam woolly adelgid across northern Utah forests, which is killing trees in recreation-heavy mountain ranges and canyons.
Read MoreThe EPA selected Utah to expand solar power to underserved communities.
Read MoreUniversity of Utah hydrologist and biochemist Paul Brooks talks about the multiyear journey of water molecules from mountain snowfall to the Great Salt Lake.
Read MoreVitae is an annual hallmark event, highlighting research excellence across University of Utah’s health sciences departments.
Read MoreAs the temperatures slowly warm and our plants wake from their winter sleep, fragrant blossoms fill the air with intoxicating aromas and the buzz of bees signal that spring is here.
Read MoreA childhood love of nature led to a career studying Earth’s atmosphere, bringing Mace to Southern Ocean on DOE-funded research expedition.
Read MoreDaniel Mendoza discusses the need for “cool zones,” for the public to escape increasingly extreme heatwaves and its associated heat-related illness.
Read MoreTop finalists from 215 international submissions are vying for the prize funds to accelerate their solutions to climate change.
Read MoreScientific Computing and Imaging (SCI) Institute celebrates 30 years of supporting research at the U.
Read MoreUtah biologists discover that tiny tropical fish’s “superpower” lies in an immune response to heart injuries.
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