UCL in the media
Still down and out in Paris and London (and not rising up)
PhD student Luke Davies (UCL English Language & Literature) says that today's employment crisis is as serious as the Great Depression - so why aren't we up in arms.
Read: The ConversationJapan and Ecuador earthquakes
Harriette Stone (UCL Civil, Environmental & Geomatic Engineering) comments on the earthquakes in Japan and Ecuador.
Listen: BBC Radio Scotland 'Good Morning Scotland' (from 2 hours 11 mins)On genocide and trauma
Professor Philippe Sands (UCL Laws) meets Jan Kizilhan, the psychologist who brought 1,100 Yazidi women, raped and tortured by Isis, to Germany for treatment.
Read: Financial TimesJudging book prizes
Professor Geoffrey Hosking (UCL SSEES) debates the politics of judging book prizes.
Listen: BBC Radio 3 'Free Thinking' (from 12 mins)The 100 000 Genomes Project
Professor Stephan Beck (UCL Cancer Institute) comments on patient confidentiality and the commercial concerns related to England's 100 000 Genomes Project.
Read: BMJBat-sound library tracks biodiversity
An international team led by scientists from UCL, University of Cambridge and the Zoological Society of London have compiled the biggest library of bat sounds to identify bats from their calls in Mexico.
Read: BBC News, More: UCL News, Los Angeles Times, Watch: Science, Listen: BBC Radio 2 'Chris Evans' (from 2 hours 31 mins), More: BBC Radio 5 live 'Up All Night' (from 51 mins 15 secs)Wealthy students keep earnings gap
Researchers from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, Cambridge University, the UCL Institute of Education and Harvard University found that graduates from wealthy families "earn significantly more" in their careers than less well-off counterparts.
Read: BBC News, More: Telegraph, Sun, Daily Mail, Huffington Post, Evening Standard, Times Higher EducationDark energy is stronger, says Hubble team
Dr Tom Kitching (UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory) says there are three possibilities to explain observations of dark energy getting stronger: one, the Hubble measurements are wrong; two, our best guess at the old strength of dark energy is wrong; or three, physicists need to rewrite their textbooks.
Read: Times (£)Unlocking small spaces could be the key to solving London's housing crisis
Professor Matthew Carmona (UCL Bartlett School of Planning) explains that there's capacity for 220,000 new homes in London's brownfield sites.
Read: The ConversationWhat your choice of degree means for your future earnings
Following a new report on how much graduates from particular courses earn, Professor Francis Green (UCL Institute of Education) looks at what this means for universities.
Read: The Conversation