UCL in the media
Roberto Saviano: my critics want to caricature me as the Rushdie of Rome
Professor John Dickie (UCL SELCS) comments on the plagiarism accusations faced by author Roberto Saviano.
Read: GuardianEarthquake artificial intelligence knows where damage is worst
Professor Peter Sammonds (UCL Earth Sciences and UCL Institute for Risk & Disaster Reduction) says: "I think the real benefit is if responders can be very rapidly updated on an emerging situation, and AI might be able to do that".
Read: New Scientist8 cities that show you what the future will look like
Professor Julio Davila (UCL Development Planning Unit) explains how Medellín's new cable cars unify a fractured city.
Read: WiredIt's getting hotter
Professor Simon Lewis (UCL Geography) says that forest fires in Indonesia could release 2 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide, about 5% of annual emissions due to human activity.
Read: EconomistMigration crisis
Professor Christian Dustmann (UCL CReAM) explains the struggle faced by countries in Europe due to the migration crisis.
Watch: BBC World NewsWorld University Rankings 2015-2016: results announced
UCL has been named 14th in the world in this year's Times Higher Education World University Rankings.
Read: THE, More: BBC News, Independent, Evening Standard, ITV News, The Week, Sydney Morning HeraldHumanities researchers press AHRC for support
Professor Melissa Terras (UCL Information Studies) says she thinks there is willingness within the AHRC to fund infrastructure projects, but the main issue is the council's budget, which is the smallest of all seven councils.
Read: Research Fortnight (£)Homes on Mars
Dr Francisco Diego Quintana (UCL Physics & Astronomy) explains the challenges of designing houses on Mars.
Listen: BBC Radio 5 live 'Breakfast' (from 2 hours 58 mins)Nasa faces contamination dilemma over Mars water investigations
Professor Andrew Coates (UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory) comments on the discovery of liquid water on Mars.
Read: Guardian, More: WiredThe Martian got me cheering, but why go to Mars?
Professor Jon Agar (UCL Science & Technology Studies) explains that although The Martian may be the brightest in the latest spate of recent space films, it doesn't inspire him to go to the Red Planet.
Read: The Conversation