Meet the 2018-2019 Columbia Startup Lab Cohort
The Lab welcomes the fifth cohort of recent alumni dedicated to growing their ventures after graduation.
The Lab welcomes the fifth cohort of recent alumni dedicated to growing their ventures after graduation.
Street Smarts VR is leveraging virtual reality to improve officer judgment and reduce avoidable police-citizen violence.
The search is over: We have the perfect gift for every dad.
Only one restaurant stands between Paul Grinberg ’89 and his goal
If you think you’re too busy to read this, then you really need to read this.
Light novels? No way. Here’s what our experts will be perusing during their time off.
As Congress moves to reform the financial regulatory framework known as Dodd-Frank, Columbia Business School’s Charles Calomiris weighs in on needed changes.
Wind and solar complement each other as renewable energy sources, says Geoffrey Heal, Chazen Senior Scholar and Donald C. Waite III Professor of Social Enterprise. He spoke at the Chazen Institute’s India Business Initiative conference in Mumbai on January 15, 2018.
Costa Ricans have made clear that public policies can ensure a greater degree of economic equality and equality of opportunity than the market alone would provide.
Now in its 22nd year of supporting student ventures, the Eugene M. Lang Entrepreneurial Initiative Fund announced seed capital investments totaling $150,000 in three student ventures.
Patrick Bolton, Barbara and David Zalaznick Professor of Business at Columbia Business School, outlines how many countries, in particular China and India, have issued “Green Bonds” to hedge climate risk in the market. A Chazen Senior Scholar, Professor Bolton presented at the Chazen Institute’s India Business Initiative conference in Mumbai on January 15, 2018.
Entrepreneurship and innovation are only growing in importance to companies large and small—and so we’ll keep innovating as well.
With demand for living space soaring, developer Meredith Marshall ’92 hopes to make housing more affordable.
National Geographic Partners CEO Gary Knell is guiding the 130-year-old brand through a period of digital disruption and scientific skepticism.
As its population grows older, China knows it must embrace technology and high paying jobs to become a wealthy economy.