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    Congratulations, new Ph.D.'s!

    Congratulations, new Ph.D.'s!

    May 28, 2015

    Sixteen Inequality & Social Policy doctoral fellows receive their Ph.D's. See what's next for these grads.

    Congratulations, new Ph.D.'s!

    Congratulations, new Ph.D.'s!

    May 26, 2016

    Congratulations to the 14 Inequality & Social Policy doctoral fellows receiving their Ph.D.'s today, and to all the graduates who have been part of our Inequality & Social Policy community.

    Cities that used lead pipes to carry water have higher murder rates says new study

    Cities that used lead pipes to carry water have higher murder rates says new study

    April 22, 2016

    International Business Times | Coverage of research by James Feigenbaum (Ph.D. candidate in Economics) and Christopher Muller (Ph.D. '14, now an RWJ Health & Society Scholar and Assistant Professor of Sociology at UC Berkeley) linking lead exposure and violent crime in the early 20th century. Feigenbaum and Muller presented their paper, which is forthcoming in Explorations in Economic History, in the April 18 Inequality Seminar.

    Cierra Robson

    Cierra Robson: 2020 Assembly Student Fellow

    November 30, 2019

    Berkman Klein Center | Cierra Robson, a PhD student in Sociology and Social Policy, has been selected as a 2020 Assembly Student Fellow by the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University. The Assembly Student Fellowship program brings together a cohort of Harvard students from a range of disciplines and schools to participate in problem-oriented seminars led by Harvard faculty and collaborate on student-led projects aimed at tackling real-world problems. This year, Assembly is taking up disinformation in the digital public sphere from a cybersecurity perspective.

    Broadly, Cierra is interested in how technological advancements both reinforce and revolutionize the American racial order, as well as how public-private collaborations both solidify and make profitable existing power hierarchies. She aims to use her research to conceptualize what meaningful regulation of Big Tech looks like.

    Choose your own election post-mortem: Part 2

    Choose your own election post-mortem: Part 2

    November 16, 2016

    Brookings Institution | By Vanessa Williamson (Ph.D. '15) and Carly Knight, Ph.D. candidate in Sociology. Williamson is now a fellow in Governance Studies at Brookings.

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