Partnering to Test
The high toll that the coronavirus has taken on long-term care facilities across the nation underscores the value of a new partnership between UNH and the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS).
The high toll that the coronavirus has taken on long-term care facilities across the nation underscores the value of a new partnership between UNH and the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS).
The University of New Hampshire Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics has achieved its highest national ranking to date, coming in at #55 in the Poets&Quants for Undergrads Best Undergraduate Business Schools 2021 rankings.
Fertilizer pollution can have ripple effects in the food webs of streams and rivers, new research from UNH and other institutions finds.
The New Hampshire Union Leader reports on the increase in pandemic-driven relocations as people take advantage of greater flexibility in their work situations. According to Ken Johnson, Carsey School Senior Demographer, New Hampshire is actually seeing an increase in population growth (based on Census data).
UNH students perform virtually with the Intercollegiate Marching Band.
The latest Institute for Health Policy and Practice data and policy brief provides an overview of the health insurance landscape in New Hampshire.
UNH historian Jason Sokol pens an opinion piece in the New York Times.
Carsey School Research assistant professor Jess Carson reports that families have likely opted out of in-person classes because of "COVID-19 restrictions in classrooms or the prospect of monitoring Zoom classes on remote learning days."
Three COLA faculty win competitive Spencer Foundation grants.
The Lowell Sun recently wrote about U.S. Census Bureau data showing that New Hampshire is one of two (the other being Maine) states in New England experiencing population growth in the last year. The editorial mentions Carsey School of Public Policy Senior Demographer Ken Johnson's research into this population growth trend and suggests some reasons for why the Granite State is attracting people – especially young people – from Massachusetts and other New England states.