ACT Human Rights Film Festival celebrates the power of film to awaken, connect and transform
The annual festival returns with unforgettable, thought-provoking films and appearances by filmmakers.
The annual festival returns with unforgettable, thought-provoking films and appearances by filmmakers.
There are more than 600 prison agricultural programs currently in the United States, but very little data looking at the how, what, and maybe most importantly, why of these programs. Colorado State University's Prison Agriculture Lab is looking to change that. Co-directors Joshua Sbicca and Carrie Chennault talk about the lab's recently published landmark dataset analyzing the different types of current prison agricultural programs, as well as the underlying drivers behind them.
The event was hosted by the new Colorado Rockies Sport Management Institute at Colorado State University exclusively for CSU sport management students.
The BIPOC Joy Art Show challenges the constant focus on trauma that Black, Indigenous and People of Color are often reduced to, prioritizing happiness and hope over suffering and hardship.
CSU has chosen the general contractor and design firm that will execute the long-anticipated makeover of the most used academic building on the Fort Collins campus.
Part of a series exploring humanity's most enduring questions, the class looks at the concept of happiness through multiple lenses.
The CSU Fight Song turns 90 years old this Saturday, Nov. 19! While the lyrics have changed over time – such as modifying "stalwart Aggies" to "stalwart Ram Team" as the university's mascot and name changed in 1950s – the beloved rallying tune has been sung thousands of times across nine decades.
CSU Sociology Professor and Food Systems Institute Co-director Michael Carolan spoke to The Audit podcast about his research into food, food systems and building empathy on common ground.
The mural, titled "State S(t)eal," is part of the Department of Art & Art History’s Mural Initiative and Engaged Art Walk program.
CSU Professor and early North American history expert Ann Little spoke with The Audit about America's history of witch trials and how society may not have come as far since that era as people think.