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    Can States Take Over and Turn Around School Districts?

    Can States Take Over and Turn Around School Districts?

    January 28, 2016

    Harvard EdCast [audio: 10:33 min] | David Deming (Ph.D. '10 and faculty) and Beth Schueler (Ed.D. candidate) reflect on lessons learned from the state's successful school takeover in Lawrence, MA. Read the research by Beth Schueler, Joshua S. Goodman (HKS faculty), and David Deming in their just released NBER Working Paper.

    New Koch: Rebranding the Koch Brothers

    New Koch: Rebranding the Koch Brothers

    January 25, 2016

    The New Yorker | Highlights new, data-rich study by Theda Skocpol (Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology) and Alex Hertel-Fernandez (Ph.D. candidate in Government & Social Policy) on grassroots mobilizations by the Koch Network. Read their paper, “The Koch Effect: The Impact of a Cadre-Led Network on American Politics and Policy," which includes early results from a collaborative study of “The Shifting U.S. Political Terrain” under way at Harvard University.

    Getting to Win-Win

    Getting to Win-Win

    February 8, 2016

    Harvard Kennedy School Magazine | Jane Mansbridge on the vanishing art and science of political compromise. Mansbridge and Cathie Jo Martin (Boston University) are the editors of Political Negotiation, published by Brookings Institution Press in December 2015.  Doctoral fellow Chase Foster (Ph.D. candidate in Government), Mansbridge, and Martin co-authored chapter 4 in the book, "Negotiation Myopia."

    "The stakes are now higher than ever, Mansbridge argues...'
    The idea is that when we design institutions we should be thinking consciously of how to design them to be partial cures for the mistakes our brains habitually make,' says Mansbridge. 'That’s how you get the rules of political engagement.'"

    Money Interests are Blocking US Action on Climate Change

    Money Interests are Blocking US Action on Climate Change

    February 8, 2016

    Aljazeera America | Opinion piece by Sean McElwee of Demos draws on data from recent work  by Theda Skocpol (Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government & Sociology) and Alex Hertel-Fernandez (Ph.D. candidate in Government & Social Policy).  Skocpol and Hertel-Fernandez are presenting the latest version of their paper,"The Koch Effect: The Impact of a Cadre-Led Network on American Politics," at the Harvard Center for American Political Studies, Feb 12, 2016.

    Sociology's Truth? W.E.B. Du Bois and the Origins of Sociology

    Sociology's Truth? W.E.B. Du Bois and the Origins of Sociology

    February 9, 2016

    Los Angeles Review of Books | By Monica Bell, Ph.D. candidate in Sociology & Social Policy. Reviewing Aldon Morris's The Scholar Denied: W.E.B. Du Bois and the Birth of Modern Sociology, Bell argues Morris evokes the challenges of black and activism-oriented scholars today.

    Mexico's Next Big Chance to Tackle Corruption

    Mexico's Next Big Chance to Tackle Corruption

    February 8, 2016

    America's Quarterly | By Viridiana Rios.  Rios (Ph.D. '13), now a research fellow at the Wilson Center for International Scholars in Washington, D.C., writes that Mexico's citizen initiative, Ley 3de3, represents the first time in Mexico's history that civil society has come together to take legislative processes against corruption into their own hands. Mexico's civil society, she argues, is leading the fight against corruption not by choice, but by necessity.

    Michael Brown, Ferguson, and why race matters for policy research

    Michael Brown, Ferguson, and why race matters for policy research

    February 9, 2016

    Urban Institute | By Steven Brown, Ph.D. candidate in Sociology and an affiliated scholar and contributor to the Inequality and Mobility Initiative at the Urban Institute. "We cannot fully put an end to unequal opportunities until we better understand and address how race shapes those factors."

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