Meet the 2025 tenured professors in the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Faculty members granted tenure in Linguistics and Philosophy, Music and Theater Arts, and Political Science.
Faculty members granted tenure in Linguistics and Philosophy, Music and Theater Arts, and Political Science.
Angie Jo’s doctoral studies find that when a collective crisis strikes, nations with shallow social safety nets, like the US, respond with massive spending.
Mariya Grinberg’s new book, “Trade in War,” examines the curious phenomenon of economic trade during military conflict.
The Initiative for New Manufacturing is convening experts across the Institute to drive a transformation of production across the U.S. and the world.
Study participants in an in-person tax-paying experiment in China were more likely to pay their taxes if government officials were monitoring and punishing corruption.
New professors join Comparative Media Studies/Writing, History, Linguistics and Philosophy, Music and Theater Arts, and Political Science.
Andrea Campbell’s new book shows that what we say we want on taxes doesn’t always match what we prefer in practice.
A new class teaches MIT students how to navigate a fast-changing world with a moral compass.
In MIT's course 17.831 (Data and Politics), students are introduced to the power of analysis, visualization, and research-supported insight into political outcomes.
PhD candidate Suzanne Freeman reveals how intelligence agencies shape foreign policy in authoritarian states.
The MIT Ethics of Computing Research Symposium showcases projects at the intersection of technology, ethics, and social responsibility.
MIT political scientist and U.S. Air Force Reserve squadron commander brings unique perspective to both the classroom and the military, leading enlisted personnel while researching the future of warfare.
MIT political science professor among cohort of fellows who will focus on building a body of research on political polarization.
Professors Andrew Vanderburg and Ariel White are honored as “Committed to Caring.”
No venture capital, no competition — just real-world problems in urgent need of solutions.