UH speaker series features policy experts, best-selling authors and more
The Better Tomorrow Speaker Series speakers will address topics in a range of disciplines, from astronomy to economic opportunity to technology policy.
The Better Tomorrow Speaker Series speakers will address topics in a range of disciplines, from astronomy to economic opportunity to technology policy.
Amy Hennessey first became interested in public relations while taking an introductory journalism course at UH Mānoa.
Eiichiro Azuma of the University of Pennsylvania will give the keynote address at the inaugural Empire Studies Initiative.
Brett Oppegaard has been awarded the 2019 Dr. Margaret Pfanstiehl Audio Description Achievement Award for Research Development from the American Council of the Blind.
Research highlights need to develop culturally competent programs to meet the dental needs of an increasingly diverse U.S. population.
Climate change will greatly impact the state's infrastructure in the next 50 years.
The opportunity was funded for three years by the National Science Foundation’s Research Experience for Undergraduates program.
The column explores the unique perceptions local people have in comparison to mainland counterparts about race and ethnicity based on geographic location, social interactions and culturally-shaped theories.
In total, UH Mānoa students took home 23 awards, including 8 first-place honors, in the Society of Professional Journalists’ Excellence in Journalism competition.
UH President David Lassner said the Center for Oral History is looking forward to exploring the early days of the former world leader.