Honoring Salvador Luria, longtime MIT professor and founding director of the MIT Center for Cancer Research
Koch Institute event celebrates the new MIT Press biography “Salvador Luria: An Immigrant Biologist in Cold War America.”
Koch Institute event celebrates the new MIT Press biography “Salvador Luria: An Immigrant Biologist in Cold War America.”
Eighty scholarly monographs and edited collections partially funded by libraries participating in MIT Press’s Direct to Open model will publish openly this year.
Two MIT professors and five alumni recognized for outstanding contributions to astronomy research, education, and communication.
The MIT physicist and author is recognized for his examination into the fundamental laws of nature.
“Carbon Queen” explores how the Institute Professor transformed our understanding of the physical world and made science and engineering more accessible to all.
Four MIT Press titles are honored by the Association of American Publishers for their extraordinary merit.
New initiative extends the press’ commitment to publishing books by historically underrepresented authors through direct financial support.
PhD students discuss their participation in The Poetry of Science project and the importance of bringing the arts into science communication.
MIT’s Alan Lightman co-authors the first title from MIT Kids Press, a new imprint from the MIT Press and Candlewick Press.
Twenty-one distinguished journalists will probe issues ranging from environmental justice and maternal health to threatened grasslands and endangered megafauna.
The Sharon Begley-STAT Science Reporting Fellowship aims to support early-career science journalists of color.
With “The Curie Society,” the press reaches out to a new generation of individuals interested in ethics and equity in STEM.
Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT also recognizes reporting from The Boston Globe, Detroit Free Press, The Arizona Republic, and Boston’s WBUR.
Seven MIT researchers see lessons and opportunities for US health care.
To understand ourselves and our place in the universe, “we should have humility but also self-respect,” the physicist writes in a new book.