Awards & Recognitions
  • Article
  • Nov 18 2022

Alison Davis, extension professor in the Department of Agricultural Economics and executive director of the Community and Economic Development Initiative of Kentucky, received the 2022 Excellence in Extension for an Individual award.

  • Article
  • Nov 17 2022

Alan Daugherty, Ph.D., D.Sc., was named the 2022 George Lyman Duff Memorial Lecturer at the American Heart Association’s (AHA) Scientific Sessions.

  • Article
  • Nov 15 2022

The 2022 James Madison Award is presented annually by the School of Journalism and Media and the Scripps Howard First Amendment Center.

  • Article
  • Oct 7 2022

The Alliance for Equity in Cancer Care is designed to make cancer care more equitable by helping patients living in underserved communities receive timely access to high-quality, culturally responsive care.

  • Article
  • Oct 3 2022

The Alzheimer’s Association welcomes the University of Kentucky’s Donna M. Wilcock, Ph.D., as the new editor-in-chief of Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association.

  • Article
  • Sep 15 2022

Work done by Dave Moecher and his Irish collaborators investigated how the Appalachian Mountains in North America were eroded over geologic time.

  • Article
  • Sep 14 2022

University of Kentucky College of Education Professor Keith B. Wilson, Ph.D., is a recipient of the 2022 American Counseling Association Fellows Award.

  • Article
  • Sep 13 2022

The professor in the Department of Chemistry has been named the 2022-23 College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor and will deliver the annual Distinguished Professor Lecture this spring.

  • Article
  • Sep 12 2022

The T. Marshall Hahn Jr. Professor of History in the College of Arts and Sciences helps tell the critical story of slavery in two upcoming PBS documentaries — "Harriet Tubman: Visions of Freedom" and "Becoming Frederick Douglass."

  • Video
  • Aug 26 2022

For her most recent project, “Mechanical Mechanisms of Biofilm Survival on Implant Surfaces,” Martha Grady is the recipient of the National Science Foundation's prestigious Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award.