News

The 2020 UO Startup Week was a virtual showcase of entrepreneurship and innovation on campus and within the greater Eugene community.
An ecommerce business founded by a Lundquist College honors student is in the midst of bold and rapid expansion.
Professor John Chalmers and his coauthor share their research on the quality of investment advice in Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance.
The Lundquist Center for Entrepreneurship has launched a new funding opportunity to support research activities of Lundquist College faculty.
The University of Oregon’s Knight Campus for Accelerating Scientific Impact and its mission of “science advancing society” inspired an honors thesis written by a Lundquist College alumnus.
Local mentor Joe Maruschak joins the college in new role aimed at better supporting the growing population of student entrepreneurs across campus.
The Oregon Consulting Group took a closer look at the available data to preliminarily assess whether gyms are high-risk environments for COVID-19 transmission.
Thanks to private philanthropy, the college is responding to the current situation in ways that will strengthen our programming going forward.
Initial data from research by Lundquist College instructor Joshua Skov and coauthors shows that ride-hailing is not proving to be a low carbon-benefit, at least not in its current form.
An online discussion centered on ways the sports business programs at the Lundquist College have been transformed by the pandemic—including unexpected accomplishments and unforeseen opportunities.
Eight Lundquist College of Business researchers brought their papers to life during the inaugural Research Slam.
A new collaborative program will teach student-athletes about personal branding, business foundations, and more.
Roger Best, Dennis Howard, Ofuma Eze-Echesi, and David Borlack examined the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on U.S. sportswear revenues.
Fourth-year undergraduate Farbod Markazi embodies what success can look like when a student combines ingenuity, passion, and hard work.
Luke Zak entered the Oregon MBA program hoping to elevate the game of quidditch to the status of a viable international sport which might one day appear in the Olympics.