Search Topics Climate Change, Environment, Energy Demography, Immigration (-) Education, Labor (-) Families, Children Finance, Fiscal and Monetary Policy (-) Globalization, Foreign Policy, Trade Health Housing, Communities, Neighborhoods (-) International Development Law, Justice, Human Rights Migration, Refugees National Security, Intelligence, Defense Politics (-) Poverty, Inequality, Opportunity Race, Gender, Identity Science, Technology, Innovation Social and Behavioral Psychology Content (-) News (-) Research Briefs Publication Date 2023 2022 2021 (-) 2020 2019 2018 2017 (-) 2016 2015 Displaying results 1 - 25 of 32 Search by Keyword Sort by Best MatchRecent FirstOld FirstA to ZZ to A Show/hide search bar School Directory Visit our school directory to search by name, title, or topics. Find People Not finding what you are looking for? Try searching across all of princeton.edu. Search News Dec 11 2020 Polarization Increases with Economic Decline, Becoming Cripplingly Contagious The rise of populist movements is changing political systems around the world. As support for these “anti-elite” movements intensifies, many are… News Nov 30 2020 Covid-19 Shutdowns Disproportionately Affected Low-Income Black Households The alarming rate at which Covid-19 has killed Black Americans has highlighted the deeply embedded racial disparities in the U.S. health care system… News Oct 29 2020 Endnotes: A World Safe for Democracy (G. John Ikenberry) For 200 years, the grand project of liberal internationalism has been to build a world order that is oriented toward progressive ideas. Today, this… News Oct 12 2020 Mellody Hobson ’91 Shortly after graduating from Princeton University, Mellody Hobson ’91 joined Ariel Investments as an intern. Today, she serves as the company’s co… News Apr 29 2020 Politics & Polls #183: Economic Inequality and Covid-19 Featuring Sir Angus Deaton Covid-19 has had a disproportionate impact on at-risk populations, shining the spotlight on economic inequality and instability. Issues such as… News Apr 27 2020 WWS Reacts: China’s Response to Covid-19 As the rest of the world struggles to combat Covid-19, China, where the virus originated in late 2019, appears to have made significant strides to… News Apr 20 2020 How Foreign Subversion Weakens the State (Melissa M. Lee) Policymakers worry that “ungoverned spaces” pose dangers to security and development. Why do such spaces exist beyond the authority of the state? In… News Apr 15 2020 WWS Reacts: How Developing Countries Might Grapple with Covid-19 Covid-19 is present in rich and poorer countries alike, but the looming crisis in developing countries — where dense, vulnerable populations make… News Apr 14 2020 Universal Childhood Allowance Could Reduce Childhood Poverty, Edin Testifies Today, about 15 million children in the United States live in families with incomes below the federal poverty threshold. This is why reducing… News Jan 15 2020 Social Networks May Drive College Decisions Younger siblings may indeed look up to their older kin — to the point that it influences where they go to college.Using data from centralized school… News Nov 29 2016 Students Participate in a Crisis Simulation: Instability in South Asia On Nov. 19, 2016, Princeton University's Center for International Security Studies (CISS) hosted more than 100 students at its annual fall crisis… News Oct 26 2016 Integration Between Pre-K and K-3 Programs Needs to be Strengthened, Princeton-Brookings Journal Finds High-quality pre-K programs can indeed play an important role in improving later outcomes for children, particularly for children from more… News Oct 10 2016 American Workers Prefer Set Work Schedules, But Would Take Wage Cuts to Work from Home Affordable child care and flexible work schedules have all been topics of debates in the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign.Yet, according to a new… News Oct 06 2016 Dean Rouse Featured in “America’s Course on Poverty” A new online course focused on poverty and inequality in the United States will launch Oct. 11 and run until Dec. 15, 2016. News Sep 16 2016 International Panel on Social Progress Seeks Comments on Report The International Panel on Social Progress (IPSP), which brings together social scientists around the world to analyze social trends and spur debate… News Aug 11 2016 Neilson Ushers Peruvian Education Policy Laboratory Professor Christopher Neilson is passionate about ensuring that government policy — in particular education policy — is founded on theory and… News Jun 15 2016 Wilson School Hosts Summer Policy Academy for Students from Pueblo and Navajo Nations Eighteen high school students from 16 Pueblo Nations in New Mexico and two students from the Navajo Nation in Arizona are visiting the Woodrow Wilson… News Jun 13 2016 Youth With Parents and Household Members in Prison More Likely to Have First Baby Before Marriage As incarceration rates have increased in the United States, so has the likelihood that children will endure the imprisonment of a parent — especially… News Jun 06 2016 The Rise of Intimate Partner Violence During the Great Recession Financial strain has long been one of the leading causes of family discord, but a recent study suggests that simply living through major economic… News Jun 01 2016 “Sailing the Water’s Edge” Receives 2016 Gladys M. Kammerer Award A book written by Professors Helen Milner of Princeton University and Dustin Tingley of Harvard University received the 2016 Gladys M. News May 18 2016 SINSI Spotlight: A Passion for the Health and Well-Being of Others Concern for the health and well-being of others has long been a driving force for Marlise Pierre-Wright ’12, MPA ’16. As a Princeton University… News May 04 2016 As Global Temperatures Rise, Children Must Be Central to Climate Change Debates Forecasts suggest that by 2050, the world could see 200 million environmental migrants, many of whom would be children. For this reason and others,… News Apr 20 2016 Mortality Rates Improve Among Kids and Young Adults in the US, Especially in Poor Counties Recent studies of mortality trends paint a gloomy picture for many middle-aged and older Americans, but a new study focused on children reveals a… News Mar 01 2016 Policy Workshop Recommendations Support Normalization of U.S.-Cuba Relations Participants in last fall’s graduate Policy Workshop, “Building Ties with Former Enemies,” met with officials from the U.S. State Department and the… News Feb 19 2016 Senior de La Bruyère Awarded Michel David-Weill Scholarship for Study at Sciences Po Senior Emily de La Bruyère, who is majoring in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and pursuing a certificate in Pagination Current page 1 Page 2 Next page Next › Last page Last »