How do high-profile leaders balance life and career in public service, especially during these politically charged times? What is like behind the scenes for politicians seeking to enact change? How can your time at Princeton prepare you for a rewarding life of public service? What advice would today's politicians give to future…
Leni Robredo was the 14th vice president of the Philippines, serving from 2016 to 2022.
During her term, she reinvented the Office of the Vice President from a purely ceremonial one into an advocacy centered office, instituting poverty alleviation programs all over the country, focusing on programs on education, health,…
In 2021, Congresswoman Barbara Lee and Senator Cory Booker proposed legislation to establish a United States Commission on Truth, Racial Healing, and Transformation.
The bill is informed by the work of dozens of truth commissions in other countries over the past 40 years. But many people are not well informed about what…
Panels of experts discuss the housing crisis in America with a focus on how we got here and what can be done. The program will be both in person and virtual. Registration required.
Registration is required to attend either in person or on Zoom.
Registration for IN-PERSON event closes December 5. Register here.
To attend…
Center for Global Development, Birdsall Conference Center, 2055 L St NW Washington DC 20036
The Next Generation of US-Africa Opportunities for Education, Training, and Professional DevelopmentThe Center for Global Development, Emerging Public Leaders, and the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs invite you to join Accelerating Public Service Leadership in Africa: The Next Generation of US-Africa…
Professor Ori Heffetz, who has been visiting Princeton's Kahneman-Treisman Center and the Center for Health and Well-Being this year from Hebrew University, will present ongoing research, Thursday, December 8 at 12 noon, in the Behavioral Works in Progress Series.
When people are asked about their own well-being, what is…
American Indian and Alaska Native persons have been disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic facing three times the likelihood of infection and death than white counterparts. Because they represent a small percentage of the national population, they face existential threat and remain invisible to the public at…