How door-to-door canvassing slowed an epidemic
Study finds that in Liberia, volunteers limited damage from Ebola by distributing information within their own communities.
Study finds that in Liberia, volunteers limited damage from Ebola by distributing information within their own communities.
MIT cryptography expert and election technology developer explains how to verify an election outcome.
In a Starr Forum talk, Luis Videgaray, director of MIT’s AI Policy for the World Project, outlines key facets of regulating new technologies.
MIT graduate student is assessing the impacts of artificial intelligence on military power, with a focus on the US and China.
In a lively poster session, more than 100 undergraduates discuss their yearlong research projects on everything from machine learning to political geography.
U.S. elections have become more “unstable,” sometimes swinging in the opposite direction from the greater electorate’s preferences.
Nuclear science and engineering and physics met political science to illuminate a new path.
The Nigerian journalist is the recipient of a prestigious fellowship that provides residencies at MIT, The Boston Globe, and The New York Times.
To help the region catch up, students organize summit to bring Latin policymakers and researchers to MIT.
Political science doctoral student Clara Vandeweerdt studies how identity shapes beliefs on complex political topics such as climate change.
Professor of economics cites the importance of initiatives like the MIT Policy Lab, which helps academics focus some energy on influencing public policy.
The political consequence of even short jail terms is disproportionately pushing African-American voters out of the electorate.
SHASS faculty members Nikhil Agarwal, Sana Aiyar, Stephanie Frampton, Daniel Hidalgo, and Miriam Schoenfield were recently granted tenure.
Based within the Center for International Studies, the lab provides outreach support to help MIT researchers connect with the policy world.
Political science PhD candidates Guillermo Toral and Tugba Bozcaga find that government-appointed officials deliver the goods — given the right circumstances.