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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 Oct 07 2020 Politics & Polls #204: America's Political Epidemic (Abdul El-Sayed) After a Rose Garden ceremony last week, President Donald Trump, members of his staff, and several Republican senators have all tested positive for… News Sep 21 2020 Middle-Aged Americans Report More Pain Than the Elderly As people age, they tend to report more acute or chronic pain — a common sign of getting older. Yet, in the United States, middle-aged adults are… News Jul 02 2020 Global Threats: How Lessons from Covid-19 Can Prevent Environmental Meltdown Epidemiologists highlighted the dangers of Covid-19 in its early stages, but their warnings went largely ignored until rising infection rates forced… 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 Jun 16 2020 Leadership During Epidemics, Bioterror Attacks, and Other Public Health Crises (Dr. Laura Kahn) World leaders have been tested in their ability to protect their citizens against Covid-19, which has upended nearly every facet of society. Stable… News May 20 2020 Politics & Polls #186: Using the 1918 Pandemic as a Blueprint for Today In grappling with the Covid-19 pandemic, many scientists and government officials are looking to the 1918 pandemic as a reference point for lessons… News May 11 2020 Wilson School Faculty to Serve on Gov. Murphy’s Restart and Recovery Commission and Advisory Council A statewide council of leaders will guide New Jersey’s restart and recovery from shutdowns implemented in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, Governor… 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 Politics & Polls #181: Health Care and Covid-19 Featuring Dr. Richard Besser Health care is deeply intertwined with public policy, especially now as the world grapples with containing Covid-19. This battle is not only being… 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 Mar 25 2020 Politics & Polls #177: Leadership in a Time of Crisis Featuring Juliette Kayyem As the number of COVID-19 cases around the nation continues to climb, Americans are racing to respond. Entire cities have ground to a halt. Doctors… News Mar 18 2020 Racial Disparities in Pollution Exposure Fell Thanks to Clean Air Act Many case studies suggest that low income and racial minority groups face disproportionately high exposures to environmental pollution. But the… 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 Dec 13 2017 Hydraulic Fracturing Negatively Impacts Infant Health From North Dakota to Ohio to Pennsylvania, hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, has transformed small towns into energy powerhouses. While… News Oct 24 2017 Reinhardt Receives Health Policy Leadership Award Uwe Reinhardt is a winner of the 2017 Bipartisan Health Policy Leadership Award from the National Alliance of Health Policy. The award recognizes… News Oct 11 2017 Boost in Collateral, Rather Than “Feeling Richer,” Drives Consumers to Borrow as Home Prices Rise When home prices rise, households tend to borrow and spend more. But economists have had trouble identifying exactly what causes that relationship… News Oct 02 2017 Funding Available for Creative Quantitative Research Projects in Education A fund offered through Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs will focus on cross-disciplinary education… News Sep 27 2017 Felten, Krueger Join Rework America Task Force Princeton professors Edward Felten and Alan Krueger will serve on a new task force aimed at transforming America’s labor market to a 21st century,… News Sep 15 2017 To Predict How Climate Change Will Affect Disease, Researchers Must Fuse Climate Science and Biology Predicting how climate change will affect the incidence of infectious diseases would have great public health benefits. But the relationship between… News Aug 21 2017 Princeton Professor Calls for Federal Guarantee of Quality Education for Kids American children, no matter where they live or what school they attend, deserve to be guaranteed a quality education, much as we guarantee a safety… News Aug 14 2017 Lower-Income Children Raised in Counties With High Upward Mobility Display Fewer Behavioral Issues, Perform Better on Cognitive Tests Children who grow up in urban counties with high upward mobility exhibit fewer behavioral problems and perform better on cognitive tests, according… News Aug 14 2017 Doctors Trained at Lowest-Ranked Medical Schools Prescribe More Opioids Physicians trained at the United States’ lowest-ranked medical schools write more opioid prescriptions than physicians trained at the highest-ranked… Pagination Current page 1 Page 2 Next page Next › Last page Last »