The U.S. Department of State has named the University of Virginia as a Fulbright U.S. Student Program Top Producing Institution for the 2022-23 academic year.
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University of Virginia students are again enhancing their education through study-abroad opportunities after a decline due to the pandemic.
UVA ranked No. 1 in the state and among the top 25 doctoral-granting institutions in the country in the number of students studying abroad, according to the Open Doors report recently released by the Institute of International Education, a New York-based nonprofit.
Students from the University of Virginia’s School of Architecture, at the invitation of the U.S. Department of State, recently stood in front of the Ukrainian ambassador to the U.S. and other dignitaries to present their proposal to help rebuild a war-torn Ukraine city.
UVA Today speaks to UVA's Dr. William Petri after his return from Saidpur, Bangladesh, where he and two doctoral candidates spent a week setting the stage for a hospital trial to combat postpartum anemia.
Building on a series of academic programs offered during the fall semester, the University of Virginia is creating more than a dozen new courses, seminars and discussions to help students, faculty and members of the surrounding community better understand the conflict in the Middle East, as the war between Israel and Hamas pushes past the 100-day mark and threatens to draw in other adversaries.
Neely Margaret Egan, who graduated in May with a degree in political and social thought, wants to broaden her horizons by working as an English teacher in Tunis, Tunisia as part of her Middle East and North Africa Regional Fellowship program.
Nearly 200 volunteers representing 30 languages signed up to translate information about COVID-19 with the community.
By the time you read this, University of Virginia student Jie Lu will be more than 7,000 miles from Grounds, reliving one of the most unlikely diplomatic breakthroughs in world history.
Lu, a fourth-year student in the McIntire School of Commerce, will join 11 other Wahoos retracing the steps of the 1971 U.S. table tennis team that became international news when one of its players boarded the wrong bus.
Professor Paul B. Stephan, an international law scholar at the University of Virginia School of Law and an expert on international business, international dispute resolution and comparative law, spoke about some of the legal concerns at stake in the new war.
While generals plan attacks with rockets, artillery, missiles and guns, two dozen University of Virginia students are looking at ways to rebuild one Ukrainian city when the fighting stops.The students are part of a School of Architecture class working with the Diplomacy Lab, part of the U.S. Department of State’s Office of Global Partnerships.