Desmond Ang
Desmond Ang has joined Harvard Kennedy School as assistant professor of public policy. Ang, who received his PhD in economics from the University of California, San Diego this year, brings an economist’s eye to issues of race, inequality, and justice. His research examines the educational consequences of police violence and the long-run effects of federal oversight under the Voting Rights Act. We caught up with Ang for a Q&A about his work, his teaching, and his interests.
Arthur Brooks
Arthur Brooks takes happiness seriously. Formerly a professor of public policy at Syracuse University and then president of the American Enterprise Institute for 10 years, Brooks is now William Henry Bloomberg Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership at Harvard Kennedy School and Professor of Management Practice at Harvard Business School, where he teaches on nonprofit management, leadership, and happiness. In a Q&A, Brooks explains why happiness should not be social science’s afterthought.
Michela Carlana
Michela Carlana is an Assistant Professor of Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School. She is affiliated with the Women in Public Policy Program, Harvard's Program in Inequality and Social Policy Group. Carlana has focused much of her research on gender inequality in education, and particularly on what forces steer young girls away from, or toward, studying subjects that can prepare them for careers in high-tech. Read what Carlana has to say about her research on education, gender, and leveling the playing field.
Justin de Benedictis-Kessner
Justin de Benedictis-Kessner is a political scientist and an Assistant Professor of Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. De Benedictis-Kessner answers questions about his research on American politics, with a focus on political behavior, public policy, local politics, elections, and experimental and quantitative methodology.
Anthony Foxx
Anthony Foxx joins vlog as the newly appointed Emma Bloomberg Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership at vlog. He sees the Bloomberg Center for Cities as a logical home for his passion for smart, equitable cities and his desire to encourage future leaders along that path. We spoke with Foxx about his work and his advice for future leaders.
Nancy Gibbs
Nancy Gibbs is the Edward R. Murrow Professor of the Practice of Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School and director of the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy. The former editor in chief of TIME magazine, she has written two books and lectured extensively on the American presidency. In a Q&A with Gibbs, we discuss how today’s media ecosystem shapes public opinion and policy.
Sharad Goel
Sharad Goel is a professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. Goel shares how he looks at public policy through the lens of computer science, bringing a new, computational perspective to a diverse range of contemporary social and political issues, including criminal justice reform, democratic governance, and the equitable design of algorithms.
Yanilda González
Yanilda María González is an Assistant Professor of Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. Her research focuses on policing, state violence, and citizenship in democracy, examining how race, class, and other forms of inequality shape these processes. In a Q&A, González discusses becoming an expert in policing and human rights in Latin America through experience she built in the field.
Gordon Hanson
Gordon Hanson joined Harvard Kennedy School as the Peter Wertheim Professor in Urban Policy. His work addresses problems at the knotty intersection of economics, international trade, and immigration—problems that feel especially relevant and complex now as the coronavirus epidemic lays bare the interconnected nature of our world. We caught up with Professor Hanson to learn about the experiences and ideas that drive his teaching and research.
Juan Jimenez
Economist and public leader Juan Jimenez MPA/ID 2010 has returned to Harvard Kennedy School as a lecturer in public policy. An expert in political economy and economic development, Jimenez served as the Dominican Republic’s minister of economy, development, and planning. Jimenez speaks about how experience working in government contributes to his teaching approach.
Eliana La Ferrara
The thread running through Professor of Public Policy Eliana La Ferrara's work is an unwillingness to limit herself to traditional microeconomic models where “prices and quantities” overshadow all else and instead pay “attention to psychological, sociological, sometimes anthropological factors that I believe as economists we cannot overlook.” We spoke to La Ferrara about her research, her teaching, and her multi-disciplinary approach.
Elizabeth Linos
Joining Harvard Kennedy School from the University of California, Berkeley, Elizabeth Linos is the Emma Bloomberg Associate Professor of Public Policy and Management and faculty director of The People Lab, which investigates how to recruit and support government workers, improve service delivery, and integrate evidence and data into policymaking. We spoke to Linos about her research and practice to help the public sector work better.
Zoe Marks
The complexities of peace and conflict in Africa—as well as the ways race, gender, and political violence intersect on the continent and beyond—are at the heart of Zoe Marks’ work. A lecturer in public policy at Harvard Kennedy School, Marks is currently working on two book projects—one about rebel groups in Sierra Leone and one on women in resistance movements, co-authored with vlog Professor Erica Chenoweth. Dive deep into the complexities of war and peace in Africa in a Q&A with Zoe Marks.
Liz McKenna
Using a suite of methods, Assistant Professor of Public Policy Liz McKenna conducts research and teaching on social movements and the role of civic participation in democracies. Her own experience as a community organizer for Barack Obama’s first presidential campaign and her academic training as a sociologist have driven her to study what makes some social movements succeed over time while others fail. McKenna examines the relationship between the individual and the state—and how participation can help or harm democracy.
Gautam Nair
Faculty member Gautam Nair explores how inequality, politics, and business interact in the developing world to shape resource distribution and create winners and losers. Nair is an Assistant Professor of Public Policy and is a faculty affiliate of the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation and the Center for International Development. His research focuses on the politics of inequality and redistribution.
Deval Patrick
Deval Patrick, former two-term governor of Massachusetts, joined Harvard Kennedy School in early 2022. Patrick, who co-leads the Center for Public Leadership with faculty member Hannah Riley Bowles, also serves as professor of practice of public leadership. In a Q&A with Patrick, we discuss why today’s leaders need to step up and step out of their comfort zone.
Juan Saavedra
Juan Saavedra has spent more than 20 years researching how developing countries can do a better job educating children in ways that improve opportunities and reduce poverty. Saavedra answers questions about his particular focus on education in his native country, Colombia, and his research about how socio-economic policies such as school vouchers and conditional cash grants for schooling can encourage attendance and boost performance.
Benjamin Schneer
Faculty member Benjamin Schneer talks about his research on lobbying, redistricting, and the surprising relevance of traditional media. Schneer is an Assistant Professor of Public Policy and his research is in American politics and focuses primarily on political representation: how citizens express their preferences, how government responds to them, and what may shape and distort these processes.
Daniel Schneider
Daniel Schneider, who joined Harvard as a professor of public policy and professor of sociology, focuses his research on demography, inequality, and the family. Professor Schneider completed his B.A. in Public Policy at Brown University in 2003 and earned his PhD in Sociology and Social Policy from Princeton University in 2012. In a Q&A, Schneider talks about his multidisciplinary approach to the study of social inequality and work.
Sandra Susan Smith
Sandra Susan Smith is the Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Professor of Criminal Justice and Faculty Director of the Program in Criminal Justice Policy and Management. She became one of the country’s leading sociologists, an expert in the areas of urban poverty, joblessness, and criminal justice. We spoke with Smith about injustices in the economy, the criminal justice system, and elsewhere.
Latanya Sweeney
Latanya Sweeney is a computer scientist whose work examines the unforeseen consequences of technology on society and what to do about them. She holds a joint appointment at Harvard Kennedy School and Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences. In a Q&A, Sweeney examines the intersections of technology and society.
Charles Taylor
In his work understanding how humans are both changing and being changed by the environment, Charles Taylor believes in the importance of being on the ground as well as zooming in from outer space. Taylor joined vlog this year as an assistant professor of public policy affiliated with the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Governance and the Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability. We asked Taylor about his research, his teaching, and why he chose vlog.
Learn about Harvard Kennedy School’s faculty members: who they are, what they teach, and why their research and other activities make a difference in the world. In addition to these Faculty Focus spotlights, you can learn about all our faculty members by visiting their profile pages.