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    Alexandra Roulet

    Alexandra Roulet

    PhD in Economics, 2017.
    Assistant Professor of Economics, INSEAD.


    Postdoctoral Fellow, Stone Centre for the Study of Wealth Inequality, INSEAD, Jan-Aug 2017.

    Améliorer les appariements sur le marché du travail, by Alexandra RouletAlexandra Roulet's second book, Améliorer les appariements sur le marché du travail, has been published by Presses de Sciences Po (2018). The book analyzes "why there are over 3 millions unemployed in France and yet 300 000 unfilled vacancies each year, and what are potential remedies to this mismatch between labor supply and labor demand." 

    Winner of the French Economic Association best book prize, 2019.

    Winner of the W.E. Upjohn Institute's Dissertation Award for the best PhD dissertation on employment-related issues, 2017.

    Repenser l’Etat. Pour une social-démocratie de l’innovationAlexandra Roulet's first book, Repenser l'Etat (in French), co-authored with Philippe Aghion, has been published by Éd. du Seuil in 2011. For an overview in English of some of the main ideas, see: 

    Philippe Aghion and Alexandra Roulet. 2014. “Growth and the Smart State.” Annual Review of Economics, 6: 913-926.

    Claudine Gay

    Claudine Gay

    Edgerley Family Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences
    Wilbur A. Cowett Professor of Government and of African and African American Studies


    Research interests:  American political behavior, public opinion, minority politics, and urban and local politics.

    Mary C. Waters

    Mary C. Waters

    PVK Professor of Arts and Sciences
    John L. Loeb Professor of Sociology


    Research interests: Integration of immigrants and their children; the transition to adulthood for the children of immigrants; intergroup relations; the measurement and meaning of racial and ethnic identity; and the social, demographic, and psychological impact of natural disasters.

    Jason Beckfield

    Jason Beckfield

    Professor of Sociology


    Research interests: Institutional causes and consequences of social inequality. Economic inequality in the European Union. Theoretical and empirical investigation of why societies have such different population health profiles, showing how institutional arrangements (welfare programs, educational expansion, labor markets, and citizenship rights) stratify health. Long-term trends in the development of political economy.

    Robert J. Sampson

    Robert J. Sampson

    Henry Ford II Professor of the Social Sciences
    Chair, Department of Sociology
    Director, Boston Area Research Initiative


    Research interests: Crime, urban inequality, the life course, neighborhood effects, civic engagement, "ecometrics," and the social structure of the contemporary city. 

    Jeffrey B. Liebman

    Jeffrey B. Liebman

    Malcolm Wiener Professor of Public Policy
    Director, Taubman Center for State and Local Government


    Research interests: Economist. Public sector economics and social policy. Tax and budget policy, social insurance, poverty, and income inequality.

    Julie Boatright Wilson

    Julie Boatright Wilson

    Harry Kahn Senior Lecturer in Social Policy


    Research interests: Sociologist. Poverty policy, family policy, and child welfare and juvenile justice issues. Adoption from public agencies, child welfare and juvenile justice reform, and community-based strategies for strengthening families' capacities to parent.

    Amitabh Chandra

    Amitabh Chandra

    Ethel Zimmerman Wiener Professor of Public Policy and Director of Health Policy Research, Harvard Kennedy School
    Henry and Allison McCance Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School


    Research interests: Economics and health policy. Innovation and cost-growth in healthcare, medical malpractice, and racial disparities in healthcare.

    David T. Ellwood

    David T. Ellwood

    Isabelle and Scott Black Professor of Political Economy
    Harvard University Distinguished Service Professor


    Research interests: Economist. Poverty and welfare, economic mobility. Labor economics, family change, low pay and unemployment, changing structure of American families.

    Mary Jo Bane

    Mary Jo Bane

    Thornton Bradshaw Professor of Public Policy and Management, Emerita


    Research interests: Poverty, welfare, families, the role of churches in civic life.

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