Adverse

Adverse: !TEST! !TEST! 2025-04-08 08:50:20

Discover

Global

Connect. Collaborate. Make the world spin. Global relationships create a smaller, smarter, more caring world.

  • Kaylee Miceli

    ‘An indescribable energy’

    Psychology major Kaylee Miceli is spending her summer in Vietnam interning with students from Tan Tao University to explore how various treatment methods affect depression.

  • Mohammed Eid training teachers to use tablets.

    Rotary Peace Center educates a new generation of peace builders at Carolina

    The Duke-UNC Rotary Peace Center trains students to become leaders in the fields of peace building and conflict resolution.

  • A man stands in the street in the Philippines.

    A global mindset

    Carolina continues to rise as a global university by collaborating with its six strategic partners around the world.

  • Students talk in a hallway.

    Going global

    Carolina will rise faster and farther as a global university by collaborating with its six strategic partners around the world.

  • Patrick Lang

    Taking the long road

    Medical student Patrick Lang has compiled scholastic achievements – including a Core Fulbright U.S. award– while never losing sight of his family’s roots in rural China.

  • Jacob Stocks

    Globetrotting Tar Heel

    During his four years at Carolina, Jacob Stocks went from not having a passport to having one stamped in Spain, Mexico and Ghana.

  • Coral.

    Transporting corals in southern Belize

    Graduate students from Carolina's Department of Marine Sciences spent 10 days transplanting corals on the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef in southern Belize. The data they collect from this research could impact coral reef conservation efforts in the future.

  • UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol L. Folt, renowned physicist Stephen Hawking and theoretical physics associate professor Laura Mersini-Houghton.

    Remembering Stephen Hawking and an historic physics conference

    The renowned physicist died on March 13, 2018. In 2015, UNC-Chapel Hill co-sponsored a conference in Sweden that brought together Hawking and other accomplished theoretical physicists to discuss whether singularities in black holes exist.