Where legal, voting by those in prison is rare, study shows
The findings suggest voting by incarcerated people is unlikely to affect electoral outcomes, in contrast to some assumptions.
The findings suggest voting by incarcerated people is unlikely to affect electoral outcomes, in contrast to some assumptions.
In 14.009, a first-year class taught by Nobel laureates, MIT students discover how economics helps solve major societal problems.
Tenth annual US C3E Women in Clean Energy Symposium focuses on equity and justice in the clean-energy transition.
PhD students discuss their participation in The Poetry of Science project and the importance of bringing the arts into science communication.
Record number of honorees will engage in the life of the Institute through teaching, research, and other interactions with the MIT community.
To mitigate natural hazards equitably, PhD candidate Ipek Bensu Manav of the MIT CSHub is incorporating social vulnerability into resilience engineering and hazard recovery.
Obiageli Nwodoh ’21 repurposed her STEM skills to pave a pre-law path at MIT and pursue social justice.
Results show infection rates increase across communities; individuals in low-income areas and those in poor health are at highest risk.
Probabilistic programming language allows for fast, error-free answers to hard AI problems, including fairness.
Using an untapped resource, the Malden River Project is boosting social resilience along with climate mitigation in the gateway city of Malden, Massachusetts.
Advancing the study and practice of thinking responsibly in computing education, research, and implementation.
People rarely vote after being incarcerated. Associate Professor Ariel White wonders what can be done about it.
Sustainability as a business imperative in supply chain management increased despite the pandemic, says MIT-led report.
Research finds Covid-19-related lockdowns led to a marked reduction in walking in lower-income areas of major metropolises.
At Picower Institute symposium, speakers describe harms of early exposure to trauma, racism, as well as the restorative power of understanding, nurturing, and extending opportunity.