Search

Search results

    The Lists Told Us Otherwise

    The Lists Told Us Otherwise

    December 26, 2016

    n+ 1 | The Democratic collapse and the ascent of Trumpism. By Daniel Schlozman (Ph.D. '11), Assistant Professor of Political Science, Johns Hopkins University.

    Schlozman is the author of When Movements Anchor Parties: Electoral Alignments in American History (Princeton University Press, 2015), winner of the 2016 Charles Tilly Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Book Award, conferred by the Collective Behavior and Social Movements Section of the American Sociological Association.

    Residential Mobility by Whites Maintains Segregation Despite Recent Changes

    Residential Mobility by Whites Maintains Segregation Despite Recent Changes

    December 21, 2016

    NYU Furman Center | By Jackelyn Hwang (Ph.D. '15), essay for the NYU Furman Center discussion series "The Dream Revisited." Hwang is postdoctoral research fellow at Princeton University, and in fall 2017 will join the Stanford University faculty as Assistant Professor of Sociology.

    What Do Parents Think of Their Children’s Schools?

    What Do Parents Think of Their Children’s Schools?

    December 13, 2016

    Education Next |  By Samuel Barrows, Paul E. Peterson, and Martin R. West. EdNext poll compares charter, district, and private schools nationwide. 

    Samuel Barrows (Ph.D. '14) isi a postdoctoral fellow at the Program on Education Policy and Governance (PEPG) at the Harvard Kennedy School. Paul E. Peterson is Henry Lee Shattuck Professor of Government at Harvard University and director of PEPG. Martin R. West (Ph.D '06), editor-in-chief of Education Next, is associate professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and deputy director of PEPG.

    A Tribute to Sir Tony Atkinson

    January 3, 2017

    Canberra Times | By Andrew Leigh (Ph.D. '04). If you've ever referred to "the 1 per cent", you're using the work of Tony Atkinson. Tony, who died on January 1, aged 72, contributed as much as any modern economist to the study of poverty and inequality...(more)

    Andrew Leigh met Tony Atkinson as an Inequality & Social Policy doctoral fellow in 2002, when Atkinson was invited to Harvard to present his work in the Inequality Seminar Series. As part of his visit, Atkinson also joined our proseminar workshop for doctoral fellows, where he served as a discussant for Andrew's research paper. Atkinson and Leigh subsequently went on to co-author a set of papers together examining inequality trends in Australia and New Zealand.

    Andrew Leigh is now shadow assistant treasurer (Australia), and a former professor of economics at the Australian National University.

    Inequality: What Can Be Done?, by Anthony B. Atkinson

    Tony Atkinson was an extraordinary human being. He was an economist by trade, who did more than anyone else to keep the study of income inequality alive from the 1960s to the mid-1990s, when most of his colleagues were either ignoring the subject or denying its importance.

    He seemed to treat everyone he encountered, from the grandees of his profession to young graduate students, with decency and respect, and devoted thousands of hours to advancing other people's projects.

    But he also cared deeply about persuading us all that rich countries could achieve low levels of economic inequality without suffering large reductions in economic efficiency or growth. Anyone who who has not read his last book, (Inequality: What Can Be Done?) should do so. 

    Christopher Jencks Malcolm Wiener Professor of Social Policy, Emeritus


    Inequality: What Can Be Done?
    By Anthony B. Atkinson, Harvard University Press, 2015.

    Tony Atkinson: Articles
    Read more of Tony Atkinson's work at his personal website, where he selected what he thought were his most important articles in 15 topical areas.

    Anthony B. Atkinson, Economist Who Pioneered Study of Inequality, Dies at 72
    The New York Times

    Passing of Anthony B. Atkinson
    Le Monde (blog) | By Thomas Piketty. "Together with Simon Kuznets, Atkinson single-handedly originated a new discipline within the social sciences and political economy: the study of historical trends in the distribution of income and wealth."

    Anthony Atkinson, a British economist and expert on inequality
    The Economist

    Does It Matter Where You Get Your Two-Year Degree?

    Does It Matter Where You Get Your Two-Year Degree?

    January 6, 2017

    IRP Poverty Research & Policy Podcast | IRP National Poverty Fellow Nicole Deterding (Ph.D. '15) talks about research she and colleague David Pedulla of Stanford University conducted that examined employers' responses to degrees from for-profit versus non-profit two-year colleges in the early phases of the hiring process [audio + transcript].

    The National Poverty Fellows program is an academic/government partnership between the Institute for Research on Poverty (IRP) at University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Office of Planning, Research, and Evaluation (OPRE) at the US Department of Health and Human Services. Learn more about Nicole Deterding's work:
    nicoledeterding.com

    Predictive Analytics: Better than human intuition?

    Predictive Analytics: Better than human intuition?

    December 7, 2016

    GovEx | GovEx, the Center for Government Excellence at Johns Hopkins University, speaks with Dr. Elizabeth Linos (Ph.D. '16), Vice President and Head of Research and Evaluation at Behavioral Insights Team North America, to explore the future of algorithms and their use in cities.

    Manufacturing In America: Fact And Fiction

    Manufacturing In America: Fact And Fiction

    January 5, 2017

    NPR On Point with Tom Ashbrook | With Alicia Sasser Modestino (Ph.D. '01), Associate Professor of Public Policy and Urban Affairs and Economics, Northeastern University, and Associate Director of the Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional Policy.

Pages