Showing results 51 - 60 of 334
At a moment when our democratic abilities seem to have eroded, and political, economic, and technological forces have weakened the capacity for collective action, People, Power,…
During the Carr Center’s 25th anniversary year, we’re looking back at the past two-and-a-half decades of human rights policy and training at the Center. Since its founding in 1999…
Conflict of interest is among the most regulated forms of official behavior. In the United States, the vast bureaucracy of the Office of Government Ethics (OGE) is almost entirely…
Vol. 10, Issue 2, Pages 30-67
Paying reparations to Black Americans has long been contentiously debated. This article addresses an unexamined pillar of this debate: the United States has a long-standing social…
Portland, Oregon recently passed Measure 26-228, which represents some of the most expansive voting reforms by a major American city in recent history. Instead of being elected in…
Beginning in 2021, state legislators introduced or passed numerous bills intended to shape appropriate content in K–12 social studies curricula. The majority of these bills were,…
Vol. 38, Issue 2, Pages 256-278
State and non-state actors often try to provoke moral emotions like guilt and shame to mobilize political change. However, tactics such as `naming and shaming’ are often…
Throughout the 2023–2024 academic year, the Carr Center has presented numerous in-person and virtual events where our guest speakers and experts have grappled with the events that…
At the Harvard Kennedy School’s 2024 Class Day Awards on Wednesday, May 22, Carr Center Faculty Director Mathias Risse announced Neha Bhatia as the winner of the Carr Center Prize…
May 21, 2024, Opinion: "More than three decades after Michael E. Porter’s seminal “Competitive Advantage of Nations” (Porter, 1990), the competitive environment has changed…