International News

Cityscape from Italy
Princeton Int'l 2025 magazine cover

Princeton Int'l magazine

The 2025 Princeton Int'l magazine celebrates the University’s commitment to international scholarship and engagement.
Read more about Princeton Int'l magazine - See Current Magazine and the Archive

All News

Results 1 - 10 of 21

Awards · North America

Carnegie Corporation Awards $800,000 Core Support Grant to SGS

The Program on Science and Global Security (SGS) is pleased to report the award of a two-year $800,000 core support grant by Carnegie Corporation of New York. The grant will support SGS in scientific and technical research, critical policy analysis, education, and outreach to enable and advance...

Awards · North America

Five Princetonians Win Schwarzman Scholarships

Princeton Class of 2026 members Margaret Miao and Alex Tseng and recent alumni Gustavo Blanco-Quiroga, Kalena Blake and Alison Lee have been named Schwarzman Scholars and will attend a one-year, fully funded master’s degree program in global affairs at Tsinghua University in Beijing.

Awards · North America

Princeton Seniors Maya Butani and Daniel Yu Win Marshall Scholarships

Class of 2026 members Maya Butani and Daniel Yu have been named Marshall Scholars to pursue two years of graduate study in the United Kingdom.The Marshall Scholarship allows “intellectually distinguished young Americans, their country’s future leaders” to study at the U.K. institution of their...

Research · North America

Princeton SPIA Faculty Offer Reactions to Trump Immigration Policies

With President Trump signing 10 administrative orders on immigration in his first week in office and pledging mass deportations and significant changes to border security, faculty at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs are providing expert insights into the situation.

Research · North America

New research reveals groundwater pathways across continent

Researchers from Princeton University and the University of Arizona have created a simulation that maps underground water on a continental scale. The result of three years’ work studying groundwater from coast to coast, the findings plot the unseen path that each raindrop or melted snowflake...

Research · North America

Helping engineers design for waterways on a changing planet

For much of history, the past guided builders’ designs. In a stable environment, this usually worked. Roman aqueducts carried water for centuries, and China’s Grand Canal still helps transport river traffic. But in a changing climate, the past may prove insufficient.