Columbia Alliance Program
An innovative academic joint venture between Columbia, École Polytechnique, Sciences Po, & Paris 1.
📸 Tag us #AllianceProgram
✨News From the Extreme Universe
Every second, billions of neutrinos pass silently through your body. Most come from the Sun. Some may come from the farthest reaches of the universe.
In this episode of Vis-à-Vis, astrophysicist Angela Olinto, Provost of Columbia University, takes us inside the science of the unseen—from particles that barely interact with matter to cosmic rays carrying more energy than any machine on Earth can produce.
We trace how our understanding of the universe evolved—from early ideas of a static cosmos to today’s picture of an expanding, accelerating universe—and why balloons, space observatories, and gravitational-wave detectors now work together to study black holes, neutron stars, and the most extreme events in nature.
A conversation about curiosity, scale, and what it means to use the universe itself as a laboratory.
🎧 News From the Extreme Universe — available now.
Link in bio.

📌 Check out this article from Sciences Po Research covering our recent Vis À Vis podcast episode, “Research at Sciences Po,” with Sciences Po Dean of the School of Research, Dina Waked, at the link in our bio!
🧠 “Whether in sociology, where scholars examine inequalities of class, gender, race, or social mobility; in political science, where they analyze how power struggles, institutions, and wars shape unequal outcomes; or in history, where we look back at colonialism, slavery, conquest, and empire to understand the realities we live in today—these issues do not exist in silos. The answers often intersect and overlap, informing one another. What is remarkable about the Sciences Po ecosystem is how it encourages interdisciplinary collaboration and cross-fertilization across disciplines.” — Dina Waked, Dean of Sciences Po School of Research
📍 Check out the link in our bio to read more!

“Europe is now taking responsibility for its own security” @jeannoelbarrot's talk is happening now! @columbia.sipa @columbiaigp

“Europe is now taking responsibility for its own security” @jeannoelbarrot's talk is happening now! @columbia.sipa @columbiaigp

“Europe is now taking responsibility for its own security” @jeannoelbarrot's talk is happening now! @columbia.sipa @columbiaigp

“Europe is now taking responsibility for its own security” @jeannoelbarrot's talk is happening now! @columbia.sipa @columbiaigp

Europe will shape the 21st century 🌍
Join us on April 27 for a timely conversation with @jeannoelbarrot, French Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs, as we explore the major global challenges defining our moment—from the war in Ukraine and tensions in the Strait of Hormuz to the future of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the shifting rules-based international order.
Following his remarks, Minister Barrot will engage in a moderated discussion and Q&A with students on the role of younger generations in shaping diplomacy and navigating an increasingly complex world.
🗣️ Speakers:
Jean-Noël Barrot
Jean-Marie Guéhenno (Moderator), Columbia SIPA
📅 Monday, April 27
⏰ 2:00–3:30 PM
📍 IAB 1512
Hosted by the Institute of Global Politics @columbia.sipa,
Co-sponsored by the Alliance Program, @europe.columbia, and @siwpscolumbia

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

One month at Columbia as a visiting scholar- somehow both hyper-specific and impossible to summarize.
I came here through a corridor that shouldn’t fully make sense on paper: practice-based research as an artist from the Sorbonne, held (and slightly destabilized) by Alliance Columbia + Sorbonne. Grateful for structures that still allow for things that don’t resolve neatly.
Thank you @sethcluett for the kind of supervision that doesn’t flatten the work, but listens to where it resists.
In between: recordings, fragments, half-formed ideas, things that almost became something else. A lot of walking. A lot of doubt. Some small, precise moments of clarity.
Also: doing all this with a two-year-old orbiting the whole experience- which means nothing is uninterrupted, nothing is ideal, and somehow everything is more real because of it. Not a balance, not a success story. Just a constant negotiation between attention, exhaustion, and the occasional feeling that something is opening.
Anyway, there was work, mothering, constant questioning. Leaving with more questions than answers (which feels correct).
Thank you @allianceprogram , @paris1pantheonsorbonne and @columbiagsas for this incredible opportunity.
Above all thank you my ride or die @edensarna best father in the world.
Paris next.

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

🌎 Celebrate Earth Day with the Alliance Program!
🌸 We have compiled our favorite environmental, climate, and planetary conversations from Vis à Vis into this special Earth Day 2025 Playlist.
🐛 Listen to these expert conversations at the link in our bio!

📣 Introducing our latest episode of Vis À Vis, featuring Dina Waked, Dean of the Sciences Po School of Research.
📚 In this episode, we explore how the Sciences Po School of Research has significantly increased its footprint in research, becoming one of the world’s leading institutions in social science research.
💻 The Sciences Po ecosystem is structured around five disciplines: law, economics, history, political science, and sociology. Research priorities include: the analysis of social policy; economic transformations; social inequalities; environmental transition; and the digital revolution.
🎧 Listen to the episode on Spotify at the link in our bio!

We are so excited to share this upcoming event, Digital Twins in Health Care: Clinical, Ethical, and Legal Perspectives! The event will take place from 9 am - 5 pm on Monday, April 27th at the CU School of Social Work, with a Zoom option available!
We are proud to share that Martin Genet, Alliance Visiting Professor from @polytechniqueparis École Polytechnique’s Mechanics Department and Solid Mechanics Laboratory, will be speaking in-person during the panel “Clinical Uses II and Clinical Perspectives.”
Register at the link in our bio.

🇫🇷 We can’t wait to hear @mbouabdallah_, Director of Villa Albertine @villa.albertine, this Monday at 6 pm @columbia.maisonfrancaise! Open to CUID holders only. See you there!

We can’t wait to host Victor Mallet @victor.mallet.56, journalist at @financialtimes for the launch of his new book, Far-Right France: Le Pen, Bardella and the Future of Europe. Join us on April 21st at noon in 413 Fayerweather. Link in bio for tickets! 🎟️🎟️🎟️

We are proud to highlight Columbia Professor of Economics, Dr. Joseph E. Stiglitz, and his contribution to the @villa.albertine Night of Ideas New York 2026. He appeared alongside NYU Philosophy Professor Juliana Uhuru Bidadanure, and writer Alissa Quart, moderated by journalist John Summers.
Thank you to all who attended, and we are looking forward to next year’s event. 🌛🌠
#NightofIdeas
#NightofIdeasNewYork
#AllianceProgram

We are proud to highlight Columbia Professor of Economics, Dr. Joseph E. Stiglitz, and his contribution to the @villa.albertine Night of Ideas New York 2026. He appeared alongside NYU Philosophy Professor Juliana Uhuru Bidadanure, and writer Alissa Quart, moderated by journalist John Summers.
Thank you to all who attended, and we are looking forward to next year’s event. 🌛🌠
#NightofIdeas
#NightofIdeasNewYork
#AllianceProgram

We are proud to highlight Columbia Professor of Economics, Dr. Joseph E. Stiglitz, and his contribution to the @villa.albertine Night of Ideas New York 2026. He appeared alongside NYU Philosophy Professor Juliana Uhuru Bidadanure, and writer Alissa Quart, moderated by journalist John Summers.
Thank you to all who attended, and we are looking forward to next year’s event. 🌛🌠
#NightofIdeas
#NightofIdeasNewYork
#AllianceProgram

On the occasion of the Night of Ideas on March 31st, Villa Albertine (the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in New York) hosted a high-level panel discussion on democracy and inequalities with Columbia Professor of Economics Joseph E. Stiglitz, NYU Philosophy Professor Juliana Uhuru Bidadanure, and writer Alissa Quart. The discussion, moderated by journalist John Summers, featured insightful analyses of inequality across disciplines - from economics to philosophy. The panelists warned that current levels of inequality in the United States are unsustainable and may endanger democratic institutions.
📸 Photo credit: Jasmina Tomic

On the occasion of the Night of Ideas on March 31st, Villa Albertine (the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in New York) hosted a high-level panel discussion on democracy and inequalities with Columbia Professor of Economics Joseph E. Stiglitz, NYU Philosophy Professor Juliana Uhuru Bidadanure, and writer Alissa Quart. The discussion, moderated by journalist John Summers, featured insightful analyses of inequality across disciplines - from economics to philosophy. The panelists warned that current levels of inequality in the United States are unsustainable and may endanger democratic institutions.
📸 Photo credit: Jasmina Tomic

On the occasion of the Night of Ideas on March 31st, Villa Albertine (the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in New York) hosted a high-level panel discussion on democracy and inequalities with Columbia Professor of Economics Joseph E. Stiglitz, NYU Philosophy Professor Juliana Uhuru Bidadanure, and writer Alissa Quart. The discussion, moderated by journalist John Summers, featured insightful analyses of inequality across disciplines - from economics to philosophy. The panelists warned that current levels of inequality in the United States are unsustainable and may endanger democratic institutions.
📸 Photo credit: Jasmina Tomic
Instagramストーリービューアは、Instagramストーリー、動画、写真、またはIGTVを秘密に見たり保存したりできる簡単なツールです。このサービスを使用すると、コンテンツをダウンロードして、いつでもオフラインで楽しむことができます。Instagramで後でチェックしたいものを見つけた場合や、匿名でストーリーを見たい場合、このビューアは最適です。Anonstoriesは、あなたの身元を隠すための優れたソリューションを提供します。Instagramは2023年8月にストーリー機能を導入し、すぐに他のプラットフォームでも採用されました。このフォーマットは魅力的で、時間に敏感なため、ユーザーが写真、動画、または自撮りをテキスト、絵文字、またはフィルターで強化して、24時間限定で公開することができます。この限られた時間枠は、通常の投稿に比べて高いエンゲージメントを生み出します。今日の世界では、ストーリーはソーシャルメディアでつながり、コミュニケーションをとる最も人気のある方法の1つです。しかし、ストーリーを視聴すると、作成者は自分の名前を視聴者リストに見ることができ、プライバシーの懸念があります。もしストーリーを目立たずに閲覧したい場合、ここでAnonstoriesが役立ちます。これを使うことで、自分の身元を明かさずにInstagramのコンテンツを視聴できます。単に調べたいプロファイルのユーザー名を入力すると、その人の最新のストーリーが表示されます。Anonstoriesビューアの特徴:- 匿名閲覧:視聴リストに名前が表示されずにストーリーを視聴 - アカウント不要:Instagramのアカウントにサインインせずに公開コンテンツを視聴 - コンテンツダウンロード:ストーリーコンテンツを直接デバイスに保存してオフラインで使用 - ハイライト視聴:24時間を過ぎてもInstagramのハイライトにアクセス - リポストモニタリング:個人プロファイルのストーリーに対するリポストやエンゲージメントのレベルを追跡 制限事項:- このツールは公開アカウントでのみ動作し、非公開アカウントはアクセスできません。 利点:- プライバシー保護:Instagramのコンテンツを匿名で閲覧可能 - シンプルで簡単:アプリのインストールや登録は不要 - 独自のツール:Instagramが提供していない方法でコンテンツをダウンロードおよび管理可能
Instagramの更新をプライバシーを守りつつ、匿名で追跡できます。
プライベートプロファイルビューアを使用して、プロフィールと写真を簡単に匿名で閲覧できます。
この無料ツールでInstagramストーリーを匿名で閲覧でき、アクティビティがストーリーアップローダーに知られることはありません。
Anonstoriesを使用すると、作成者に通知されることなくInstagramストーリーを閲覧できます。
iOS、Android、Windows、macOS、ChromeやSafariなどの最新のブラウザで問題なく動作します。
ログイン情報なしで、安全かつ匿名で閲覧できます。
ユーザーは、ユーザー名を入力するだけで公開ストーリーを閲覧可能—アカウント登録は不要です。
写真(JPEG)と動画(MP4)を簡単にダウンロードできます。
サービスは無料で利用できます。
非公開アカウントのコンテンツはフォロワーのみがアクセスできます。
ファイルは個人または教育目的でのみ使用し、著作権法を遵守する必要があります。
公開ユーザー名を入力して、ストーリーを閲覧またはダウンロードします。サービスはコンテンツをローカルに保存するための直接リンクを生成します。