Absent legislative victory, the president can still meet US climate goals
Study finds activating a Clean Air Act provision could deliver major climate, health, and economic benefits.
Study finds activating a Clean Air Act provision could deliver major climate, health, and economic benefits.
Washington is recognizing that the American truck driver shortage might have been misdiagnosed.
New study reveals multiple pathways for a successful energy transition by 2050.
A new platform will unite climate models, impact predictions, random control trial evaluations, and humanitarian services to bring cutting-edge tools to Bangladeshi communities.
PhD student Paige Bollen finds urban street networks that encourage encounters among strangers link to lower ethnic tensions and anti-immigrant hostility.
To put global climate modeling at the fingertips of local decision-makers, some scientists think it’s time to rethink the system from scratch.
New collaboration aims to strengthen Egypt’s poverty alleviation policies through rigorous evaluation and innovation.
Power flowing both ways across the border offers a pathway to clean electricity in 2050.
From nuclear proliferation to climate change, Richard K. Lester taps research talent to map a path toward a sustainable planet.
MIT Center for International Studies and Security Studies Program offer new resources for modeling human behavior and decision-making in real-world scenarios.
Alum seeks reliable and environmentally sensitive water and sanitation solutions for the developing world.
MLK Visiting Professor S. Craig Watkins looks beyond algorithm bias to an AI future where models more effectively deal with systemic inequality.
Doctoral student Blair Read links rise of private education in India to local political competition, signaling potential erosion of public services.
A new MIT-wide effort launched by the Institute for Data, Systems, and Society uses social science and computation to address systemic racism.
Growing demand for an energy transition could move the needle, but not far enough.