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Search 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 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 Jun 30 2020 Covid-19 is Exposing Inequalities in Health and Wealth, Deaton Testifies The ongoing Covid-19 pandemic is exposing and exacerbating health disparities in America, with Black and brown communities hit especially hard. This… 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 Sep 16 2019 Funding Available for Innovative Education Projects and Programs A fund offered through Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs will support creative, interdisciplinary… News May 29 2019 Universal Approaches to Promoting Healthy Development Princeton University and the Brookings Institution released “Universal Approaches to Promoting Healthy Development” on May 29. News May 24 2019 WWS Reacts: Restricting Abortions Across America Reproductive rights are now front and center in the 2020 campaign, as a number of states recently have tried to restrict or regulate abortions in… News Apr 24 2019 Inequality Gap Grew Before the Great Recession and After, Study Finds The Great Recession hit Americans across the socioeconomic spectrum, with some still working to recover economically. Yet, the drivers behind these… News Mar 08 2019 Princeton Researchers Awarded Funding for Innovative Education Research Projects A group of researchers at Princeton University will receive funding to work on innovative, cross-disciplinary education research projects over the… News Feb 04 2019 Project to Collect Real Portraits of American Life Today, only half of children grow up to earn more than their parents, as opportunities for upward mobility continue to decline. Meanwhile, more than… News Jan 15 2019 Q&A: Information, Democracy, and Autocracy: Transparency and Political (In)Stability Americans seeking information about unemployment rates, wage growth and inflation can do so with the click of a button. But transparency of this kind… News Dec 08 2015 Currie Wins Carolyn Shaw Bell Award Janet M. News Nov 05 2015 Tilghman Joins National Panel Examining Future of Higher Education Shirley M. Tilghman, president of Princeton University, emeritus, and professor of molecular biology and public affairs, has been named to a national… News Nov 02 2015 Quiet ‘Epidemic’ Has Killed Half a Million Middle-Aged White Americans Despite advances in health care and quality of life, white middle-aged Americans have seen overall mortality rates increase over the past 15 years,… News Oct 14 2015 Rogerson Wins R.K. Cho Economics Prize Richard Rogerson, the Charles and Marie Robertson Professor of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of… News Sep 29 2015 WooCast: Behind the Scenes of the Princeton-Fung Global Forum Resolving epidemics like the Ebola crisis requires a multidisciplinary approach –involving not only public health and medical knowledge but an… News Sep 24 2015 Economist Currie Investigates the Building Blocks of Children's Success Trained as a labor economist at Princeton, Janet Currie wrote her dissertation on strikes and arbitration. News Sep 14 2015 Inequality Grows as Economies Develop, Regardless of Technology While technological progress favoring skilled workers is one of the main drivers behind inequality in America, the chasm between the rich and poor… News Aug 05 2015 Class Snapshot: “Preschool, Primary and Secondary Education in South Africa” Class: “Preschool, Primary and Secondary Education in South Africa”Location: Cape Town, South Africa News Jul 02 2015 From Crisis to Progress Half of the 220,000 people killed in the Syrian civil war have been civilians. Untargeted barrel bombings have crumbled cities and diminished basic… News Jun 24 2015 Q&A: Macedo Looks Ahead to the Future of Marriage The Supreme Court is expected to rule soon on the right of same-sex couples to marry, even as people on both ends of the political spectrum have cast… News May 18 2015 Hypersegregated Cities Face Tough Road to Change Baltimore, Maryland, and Ferguson, Missouri, share more than being the sites of racial strife over the past year. Both are part of metropolitan areas… News May 07 2015 A Deadly Shadow: Measles May Weaken Immune System Up to Three Years The measles virus can cause serious disease in children by temporarily suppressing their immune systems. This vulnerability was previously thought to… Pagination Current page 1 Page 2 Next page Next › Last page Last »