The rules of the game
Rising superpowers like China are “cautious opportunists” in global institutions, and the U.S. should avoid overreaction, PhD student Raymond Wang argues.
Rising superpowers like China are “cautious opportunists” in global institutions, and the U.S. should avoid overreaction, PhD student Raymond Wang argues.
The senior program and technical associate for the Community Services Office has been a supporter of the MIT community since he arrived on campus as a student.
Known for building connections between the social sciences, data science, and computation, the political science professor will lead IDSS into its next chapter.
An influential national expert on undersea warfare, Coté is remembered as "the heart and soul of SSP."
The new professorship will enable continued economics scholarship and help the chairholder train and support future economists.
Multimedia artist Jackson 2bears reimagines the Haudenosaunee longhouse and creation story.
After 36 years and hundreds of titles, the executive editor reflects on his career as a “champion of rigorous and brilliant scholarship.”
The MITx MicroMasters in Data, Economics, and Design of Policy program educates learners around the world using its data-driven approach to poverty alleviation.
“I would like to understand the extent to which we understand things,” the MIT economist says.
A class this semester challenged students to evaluate technologies to help MIT decarbonize — with implications for organizations across the globe.
Namrata Kala’s wide-ranging research shows how climate change and other factors affect companies and their employees.
In the new economics course 14.163 (Algorithms and Behavioral Science), students investigate the deployment of machine-learning tools and their potential to understand people, reduce bias, and improve society.
Professors Erik Lin-Greenberg and Tracy Slatyer are honored as “Committed to Caring.”
In the first quintillionth of a second, the universe may have sprouted microscopic black holes with enormous amounts of nuclear charge, MIT physicists propose.
Discounting calculations are ubiquitous today — thanks partly to the English clergy who spread them amid turmoil in the 1600s, an MIT scholar shows.