UB in the News

  • Christian Science Monitor: Jamaican economy is vulnerable, law prof says
    5/25/10
    An article in the Christian Science Monitor about drug-related violence in the Jamaican capital of Kingston quotes David Westbrook, professor of law, who recently visited Jamaica to assess the economy.
  • Tahoe Daily Tribune: Social support can indeed cross species
    5/24/10
    An article about choosing a pet in the Tahoe Daily Tribune references an article in a 2002 issue of Psychosometic Medicine that quoted UB's Karen Allen.
  • Mail & Guardian: Malaria cases increase as temperatures rise
    5/24/10
    An article in the Mail & Guardian, an African online newspaper, on global warming and the growing number of cases of malaria in Africa reports that researchers at the Kenya Medical Research Institute and UB found that a 1-degree Celsius increase in the minimum and maximum monthly temperature would lead to an 8-95 percent increase in the number of malaria outpatients.
  • Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: Financial expert discusses stock market fluctuations
    5/23/10
    Christian Tiu, assistant professor of finance and managerial economics, was quoted in an article in the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle about the uneven stock market results, which, he said, reflect investor's uncertainty over where the economy is going.
  • Psychology Today: What's the best way to get people to eat better?
    5/23/10
    An article on Psychology Today's "The Science of Willpower" blog about what is more effective in helping people to eat a healthier diet, making healthy food more affordable or making unhealthy food more expensive, reports that a UB study found that increasing the cost of unhealthy foods led study participants to choose healthier foods.
  • Reuters: Built of bacteria?
    5/20/10
    An article distributed by Reuters about the human gene catalog and how little is known about the many hundreds of different types of bacteria, viruses and yeast that inhabit people's skin, mouth, scalp and gut reports that in 2006, Steven Gill, associate professor of oral biology, estimated that 90 percent of the cells on the human body are actually bacteria.
  • Associated Press of Pakistan: Legal scholar optimistic about Pakistan's potential
    5/20/10
    An article on the Associated Press of Pakistan reports on a presentation given by David A. Westbrook, Floyd H. and Hilda Hurst Faculty Scholar in the Law School. Pakistan has great potential in the form of natural resources and human capital but there is need to improve security, increase power generation and implement laws to curb corruption, he said.
  • Seven Days: Professor quoted on black history in Vermont
    5/19/10
    An article in Seven Days, an independent Vermont publication, quotes Kari Winter, professor of American studies, about a new book about the black families who farmed and thrived in a small town in the state. "It's unquestionable that black farmers would have encountered racism in Vermont," she said.
  • Providence Journal: Political scientists on freedom in the U.S. in light of Arizona's controversial new immigration law
    5/17/10
    An op-ed in the Providence Journal about Arizona's controversial new immigration law and the threat it poses to Americans' basic rights and liberties was co-written my Jason Sorens, assistant professor of political science, who calls the new law "as much a threat to our liberty as a protector of it."
  • USA Today: Police report cards that rate cars' vulnerability to theft increasingly popular across the country, including at UB
    5/17/10
    An article in USA Today about the use of police "report cards" that rate cars' vulnerability to theft quotes John DellaContrada, senior director of media relations, who said UB, like cities in Vermont, Texas and California, has a report card program.

UB faculty frequently offer expert perspectives on issues that are part of the current public discourse, including ones that may be perceived as controversial. It is our belief—and at the core of UB’s academic mission—that constructive, thoughtful dialogue fosters a better understanding of our world. Thus, we openly share these perspectives.