Economists weigh a new approach to unemployment insurance
Study suggests automatically starting benefits at the outset of a recession would remove uncertainty for workers.
Study suggests automatically starting benefits at the outset of a recession would remove uncertainty for workers.
Research shows that in Hungary, debt drove voters to the right, as part of a consequential shift.
The Robert E. Wilhelm Fellows Program brings real-world experience and new scholarship to CIS and is a vital part of its research community.
Study suggests sectarian identity in the region is tied to domestic matters, not a larger, transnational religious split.
Security Studies Program offers knowledge on national security issues.
MIT political science master’s student Milain Fayulu is building brands to bring change to his home country.
Fulbright US Student Program funds opportunities for research, graduate study, and teaching abroad.
In a new book, MIT political scientist Evan Lieberman examines a quarter-century of post-Apartheid government and finds meaningful progress.
Awarded by the Center for International Studies, the prize will help support the PhD candidate's dissertation research on Chinese foreign and security policy.
At the latest Starr Forum, John Tirman and his collaborators describe the cultural framework that has worsened US-Iran relations.
Students and postdocs from MIT's Science Policy Initiative meet with lawmakers on science-engineering-technology Congressional Visit Days 2022.
PhD student Paige Bollen finds urban street networks that encourage encounters among strangers link to lower ethnic tensions and anti-immigrant hostility.
An expert panel explores the war’s impact, from a refugee crisis to China’s role and nuclear tensions.
MIT Center for International Studies and Security Studies Program offer new resources for modeling human behavior and decision-making in real-world scenarios.
At a recent seminar, MIT faculty analyzed Russia's invasion of Ukraine.