Ethics, computing, and AI: Perspectives from MIT
Faculty representing all five MIT schools offer views on the ethical and societal implications of new technologies.
Faculty representing all five MIT schools offer views on the ethical and societal implications of new technologies.
Researchers find vast gains in productivity after countries democratize.
With his innovative method for analyzing language, political science student Andrew Halterman maps civilian deaths in Syria.
In Bernardo Zacka’s class 17.01, students explore human values and the many ways of imagining a just society.
Embedded with street-level bureaucrats, political theorist Bernardo Zacka reveals the complex moral landscape civil servants must navigate.
A century after its bitter end, the political science professor calls the Great War a wellspring of the 20th century's horrors and tragedies.
SHASS faculty members offer research-based perspectives with commentaries, plus a Music for the Midterms playlist, and an election book list.
Investigating the political and economic consequences of large-scale deadly conflict, Volha Charnysh discovers that community-level interactions make a big impact.
Teppei Yamamoto examines the methods of his discipline, to help scholars nail down cause and effect.
In MIT visit, former CIA and NSA director Michael Hayden describes current difficulties faced by society and U.S. intelligence services.
MIT experts are among co-authors calling for ballot paper trails and other resilient practices to avoid election hacking.
Launch of In Song Kim’s LobbyView.org makes it simple to follow the path of money in politics.
Associate Professor Devin Caughey’s new book looks at a massive political shift that took place in a one-party region.
Alumna builds on her foundation in nuclear policy through a Herbert Scoville Jr. Peace Fellowship.
Selin will spearhead the master's program for students whose research addresses societal challenges at the intersection of technology and policy.