The language of change
Preparing for a career advancing the science and policy of climate issues, junior Ryan Conti focuses on math, computer science, and the philosophy of language.
Preparing for a career advancing the science and policy of climate issues, junior Ryan Conti focuses on math, computer science, and the philosophy of language.
PhD student Ying Gao's research reveals that the urban poor in the developing world are politically engaged and capable of effecting change.
New professors join Comparative Media Studies/Writing, Economics, Literature, Philosophy, and Political Science.
A storytelling project by Christine Walley and Chris Boebel explores the social impacts of late 20th century deindustrialization.
New research by political science PhD candidate Meicen Sun illuminates the broad economic and political impacts of internet restrictions.
Political science PhD student Emilia Simison has found that despotic regimes vary, and the move to democracy doesn’t necessarily guarantee policy change.
Professors Noelle Selin and Anne White will co-chair the Climate Nucleus, charged with managing and implementing MIT’s new plan.
A panel of foreign-policy experts surveys the uncertainties facing the country as it returns to Taliban rule.
Economists find companies’ adoption of robots is partly due to shortages in middle-aged labor.
Steven Simon, the Robert E. Wilhelm Fellow at the MIT Center for International Studies and an expert on US strategy and the war on terror, weighs in on 9/11 and where we can go from here.
The move places all of MIT’s Institute-wide writing and communications instruction under one academic roof.
MIT’s Alan Lightman co-authors the first title from MIT Kids Press, a new imprint from the MIT Press and Candlewick Press.
Analysis of Medicare data finds location matters, not just past health behavior.
The lab’s artists and technology scholars are exploring representation and reality — and shaping the future of storytelling.
Large-scale video campaign allowed physicians and public health messengers to encourage staying home over the 2020 holidays.