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Professor Gordon Hanson and collaborators wrote about a phenomenon they called the China Shock, which saw traditional U.S.
Research by Harvard Kennedy School scholar Pippa Norris suggests that both autocracies and countries undergoing democratic ...
Join The Journalist's Resource and The Marshall Project for this on-the-record conversation with experts on prison staffing ...
In this Hybrid Research Seminar, Josh Lerner, Jacob H. Schiff Professor in Investment Banking at Harvard Business School will ...
2022, Paper: "In a 2020 JAMA Viewpoint, Lawrence Summers and I guessed at the possible economic costs of long COVID.1 At the time, we thought the cost might be $2.6 trillion. With more data, that ...
This article reviews the recent literature on accountability in developing democracies through the lens of two nested principal–agent problems: the relationship between voters and elected politicians ...
Where does scientific discovery happen, and why does it matter? A recent analysis by Amitabh Chandra, Harvard Kennedy School ...
Gordon Hanson, Peter Wertheim Professor in Urban Policy, explains the history of tariffs, why they fell out of favor with U.S ...
Professors Archon Fung of Harvard Kennedy School and Lawrence Lessig of Harvard Law School say Trump’s brazen embrace of billionaire ruling partners could be an inflection point in America’s long ...
Following the latest antitrust lawsuits against Facebook faculty member Jason Furman outlines the limits of litigation and the benefits of Big Tech regulation.
Harvard Kennedy School faculty analyze what the U.S. Supreme Court ruling ending constitutional protection for abortion means for civil rights, American democracy, law, and policy.
On the morning of Tuesday, September 11, 2001, a series of shattering terrorist attacks, including the destruction of New York's iconic Twin Towers, set in motion events that would transform both ...
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