The director of Yale University’s Center for the Study of Globalization, Strobe Talbott, will join Yale professors Paul Bracken, Charles Hill and Harold Koh Thursday, January 17 at the Boston Public Library’s Rabb Lecture Hall, 700 Boylston St., Boston,...
The intersection of love and the law in works by Spain’s most famous author, Miguel de Cervantes, will be explored in the spring series of DeVane Lectures, to be presented by Roberto Gonz‡lez Echevarr’a, the Sterling Professor of Comparative and Hispanic...
Yale School of Medicine researchers have received a $9 million grant from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism to help translate research findings about alcoholism into treatment for patients. The five-year grant to John Krystal, M.D...
Some persons with schizophrenia can remember complex sounds, such as intricate bird songs, but not simple words, providing yet more evidence about the complex nature of the mental illness, a study by Yale researchers has found. “This gives you a sense...
The number of people treated for depression has increased dramatically, most likely due to reduced stigma about mental health problems as well as the availability of new medications, according to a Yale School of Medicine researcher. The study,...
Despite reports to the contrary, clean water and full strength bleach remain an effective means for injection drug users to disinfect syringes contaminated with the HIV virus, a Yale study has found. For years, bleaching of syringes was suggested to...
Six Yale University scholars joined by two other leading scholars in international relations, security and science analyze the implications of September 11 in America and beyond in their book, “The Age of Terror: America and the World After September 11...