BC.EDU LINKS
A study led by a Connell School of Nursing researcher looks at health behaviors and outcomes across three generations of Arab immigrants.
BC political scientist Lindsey O'Rourke is honored for her book on covert regime change.
International Education Week events across campus center on global environmental injustice.
Jesuit Refugee Service and BC School of Theology and Ministry partner on a faith-based program for refugees.
Boston College researchers pinpoint the source of the unique chemical composition of volcanic rocks.
A $3.2-million grant to the BC School of Social Work will expand its research program on children and adversity.
Irish Fulbright scholar Conor Quinn: BC's cybersecurity master's program addresses critical need in an increasingly vital field.
At a memorial Mass, the former vice provost and social work dean was recalled as a visionary, energetic educator whose concern for others extended far and wide.
Will the UK leave the EU? If so, when and how? For BC's UK and Irish natives, it's not just an academic question.
Social work researcher Theresa Betancourt discusses her groundbreaking research of war-related childhood trauma at a global conference in Beirut.
Boston College's vice provost for global engagement and former social work dean, whose leadership brought vitality and world vision to the University, has died at age 66.
New online mentoring platform links undergraduate and graduate students with alumni worldwide.
Accepted from a record number of applicants, the first-year class is the most talented and diverse in Boston College history.
Graduate student Zainabu Mohamed uses BC lessons to aid her Kenyan school.
Internationally respected nurse scientist Mei R. Fu is the inaugural holder of a new endowed chair in BC's Connell School.
BC's Marcel Uwineza, S.J., co-organizes an international conference to reimagine Church and society in post-genocide Rwanda.
‘Paris Noir’ summer course gives students a chance to explore black history and identity in France.
A diverse, interdisciplinary fall lineup kicks off with former president of Ireland and U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson.
Global Observatory on Pollution and Health Director Phil Landrigan, M.D., will receive the Rodale Institute's Organic Pioneer Award.
BC graduate Joseph Rizzuto ’15, now in medical school, is creating his own service-learning tradition in Nepal.
Boston College undergraduates are immersed in study abroad through summer travel grants and fellowships.
Ariel Laguilles '00 is the first person to run the entire length of the Camino Ignaciano in Spain.
The Lynch School's partnership with one of South Korea's most prestigious universities also includes research collaboration.
Boston College is among top producers of Peace Corps volunteers for 2019, with 19 alumni at work around the world.
An international research team uncovers a drug and diet pairing that could fight a deadly brain cancer.
Are they a game-changing disruption of the global financial system—or not? A BC Carroll School researcher weighs in.
Led by acclaimed epidemiologist and public health champion Philip Landrigan ’63, a new BC program takes on a global killer.
A School of Social Work professor and new alumna share a commitment to the Vietnamese American community.
Alumni working to alleviate poverty, disease, famine, and illiteracy across the globe draw support from the Boston College Irish Famine Memorial Fund.
Families and communities are central to recovery for Sierra Leone's former child soldiers, BC researchers find in 15-year study of war-affected youth.
A new repository for records and documents of religious orders and congregations in the U.S. and Canada.
In a historic appointment, Pope Francis names STM student Sr. Nathalie Becquart to the secretariat of the Synod of Bishops.
From attending college to summiting Mt. Kilimanjaro, Nick Claudio ’22 hasn’t let blindness stop him from reaching new heights.
Ten members of the Class of 2019 and three alumni receive Fulbright awards; four more named as alternates.
Two years after Ava Tessitore '17 won a Fulbright to Austria, her younger sister Lia '19, also wins a Fulbright to study there.
Eleven women religious from Latin America now hold master's degrees in applied leadership from BC's Woods College.
The Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies has forged new relationships on campus and around the globe.
BC researchers tackle a parasite that brings risks to pregnancy and sight—and infects nearly a third of the world’s population.
Maria Meyer '19 of the Connell School of Nursing receives BC's top undergraduate Commencement honor.
International higher education leader Isabel Capeloa Gil: Seek 'the most challenging dimension of human growth.'
Collaboration aims to improve the quality of life and care for refugees and forcibly displaced persons.
Global Leadership Institute, M.S. in Cybersecurity Policy and Governance collaborate with Ireland and Northern Ireland, NATO, and the EU.
American Council of Learned Societies recognizes historian Priya Lal's research of labor and nation building in Southeastern Africa.
The story of a wrongful deportation and the BC program helped to fight it.
At the U.N., Marcel Uwineza, S.J., a survivor of the genocide in Rwanda, speaks of forgiveness, love, and remembrance.
International Catholic higher education leader Isabel Capeloa Gil will address the graduates Commencement.
Center for Human Rights and International Justice event brings plight of refugees into plain view.
Two-day event will consider ways to protect the rights of non-citizens in the face of exclusionary politics.
A Q&A with Burns Visiting Scholar in Irish Studies Patrick Lonergan.
Grounded in science, it will draw from BC's schools of arts and sciences, nursing, education, law, and social work.