ACT Human Rights Film Festival brings international filmmakers, stories to Fort Collins
The eighth annual ACT Human Rights Film Festival will include exclusive opportunities to engage with the filmmakers behind the documentaries.
The eighth annual ACT Human Rights Film Festival will include exclusive opportunities to engage with the filmmakers behind the documentaries.
From voters rejecting a bid to host the Winter Olympics to the Earth Liberation Front's attack on Vail Ski Resort, CSU Associate Professor Michael Childers says it hasn't been all powder for Colorado's snow business.
Jim Benemann, one of Colorado State University’s most prominent alumni in Colorado media, is retiring from his position as CBS4 anchor this month, and he has chosen CSU’s Department of Journalism and Media Communication as one of the fundraising recipients featured at his upcoming retirement celebration.
John Slater and Nicole Archambeau are both historians who study Europe in the 16th and 14th centuries, respectively, looking at the ways in which people understood illness, pursued wellness and worked to heal themselves.
In February, communication scholars from all over the western US gathered in Phoenix, Arizona for the annual Western States Communication Association (WSCA) conference. Among them were two CSU communication studies majors, Olivia Birg and Izzy Henry.
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 Center for Literary Publishing—a Colorado State University publishing institution that provides graduate students with the hands-on experience of working at a small literary press—was recently awarded its twelfth grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).
In The Beginning, photographer Kei Ito creates an immersive environment to consider the shared pasts and harms suffered as a result of nuclear weapons, transforming the gallery into a monument to the past and present.