Lindsay Hooper wants to rewrite the rules of the global economy. She leads the Cambridge Institute of Sustainability ...
Nearly two-thirds (61%) of adults say they expect global research universities, such as the University of Cambridge, to come ...
Imagine a place where the world’s best researchers come together to solve our most pressing crises. Where hard-won evidence ...
Emily's been a figurehead of climate science for decades, bringing her prowess to the University, the British Antarctic ...
Economist, researcher and educator, Bhaskar Vira is keeping faith with a life-long love for the natural world and a ...
Meet 10 of our spinouts, all committed to changing the story of cancer. Astex's FBDD approach has led to the approval of ...
Specimens in a Cambridge museum will be brought to life through the power of Artificial Intelligence, by a team aiming to strengthen our connection with the ...
Cambridge oncologist Raj Jena has been appointed the UK’s first Clinical Professor of AI in Radiotherapy. The creation of the new Cambridge University Clinical Professorship signals the importance of ...
Reisner’s team has developed devices that can convert contaminated water or seawater into clean hydrogen fuel and drinking ...
Two University alumni, Sir Demis Hassabis and Dr John Jumper, have been jointly awarded this year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry ...
If we don’t stop global temperatures – both on land and at sea – from rising, the Great Barrier Reef could become a coral graveyard. A team of scientists has decided to do something about it.
In the article, a team of US scientists led by Professor Mark Skolnick identified a gene known as BRCA1, which was faulty in a number of families with hereditary breast and ovarian cancers.