Governing for our descendants
In a recent essay, Professor Lily Tsai shares ideas on how to include future generations, who will face the climate crisis we’ve created, in our definition of our collective society.
In a recent essay, Professor Lily Tsai shares ideas on how to include future generations, who will face the climate crisis we’ve created, in our definition of our collective society.
The research center will support two nonprofits and four government agencies in designing randomized evaluations on housing stability, procedural justice, transportation, income assistance, and more.
In Kenya, property rights are granted more often by democratic regimes than by autocrats — but decisions tend to be politically motivated regardless of who’s in charge.
A survey to measure who was getting vaccinated against Covid-19 in Uganda finds health workers had an important role to play.
Ali Jadbabaie and Robert van der Hilst discuss how a new joint degree program in climate system science and engineering will prepare students to solve global-scale environmental problems.
MIT political scientist In Song Kim shines a bright light on the dark art of political lobbying.
Fellowship provides funding for graduate school and recognizes future public service leaders.
Following an influential career at NASA, Ezinne Uzo-Okoro SM ’20, PhD ’22 now shapes space policy as a top White House advisor.
Receiving the Robert A. Muh award, the former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf calls for a greater sense of collective purpose in politics.
In MIT visit, CEO Pat Gelsinger sounds a bullish note on the future of U.S. semiconductor manufacturing.
MIT scholars discuss the history behind the war, lessons learned on state-building, and Iraq’s current political outlook.
Former Pennsylvania governor honored for distinguished political career.
Aleksander Mądry urges lawmakers to ask rigorous questions about how AI tools are being used by corporations.
Replacing rice-bag delivery with digital card vouchers helps recipients get their intended supplies, researchers report.
The Advanced Computing Users Survey, sampling sentiments from 120 top-tier universities, national labs, federal agencies, and private firms, finds the decline in America’s advanced computing lead spans many areas.