Archives for 2017

Kenneth Arrow’s Legacy Helps Explain Election Flaws
Career
March 2, 2017

Kenneth Arrow’s Legacy Helps Explain Election Flaws

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How Does Economic Inequality Affect Children’s Development?
Public Policy
March 2, 2017

How Does Economic Inequality Affect Children’s Development?

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Gary King on Big Data Analysis
Social Science Bites
March 1, 2017

Gary King on Big Data Analysis

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Princeton Economist Alan Krueger to Receive Moynihan Prize
Recognition
February 24, 2017

Princeton Economist Alan Krueger to Receive Moynihan Prize

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Sydney’s ‘Progress in Political Economy’ Named Best IR Blog

Sydney’s ‘Progress in Political Economy’ Named Best IR Blog

One of the highlights of the International Studies Association’s annual conference – assuming you weren’t boycotting the whole affair – was the annual Duckies Awards, which recognize public-facing work in the field.

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Worry About Adults and How We Come to Believe in Lies

Worry About Adults and How We Come to Believe in Lies

We have entered an era of lifelong media education, says Michelle L. Stack. This includes an examination of how we freely share information about ourselves on social media that is then used to frame how we see others and ourselves.

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Video: What is ‘Post-Truth’? What Can We Do About It?

Video: What is ‘Post-Truth’? What Can We Do About It?

At a panel debate held by the Royal Statistical Society titled ‘Post-truth: what is it and what can we do about it,’ panelists from BuzzFeed, Sense about Science, Full Fact, the Oxford Internet Institute and the RSS debated this new phenomenon.

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William Julius Wilson to Receive 2017 SAGE-CASBS Award

William Julius Wilson to Receive 2017 SAGE-CASBS Award

SAGE Publishing and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University will present sociologist William Julius Wilson, a leader for a half century in the study of race and inequality in the United States, the 2017 SAGE-CASBS Award.

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Keeping Government ‘Nudges’ From the Dark Side

Keeping Government ‘Nudges’ From the Dark Side

Governments around the world have found success using the burgeoning field of behavioral science to improve the efficiency of their policies and increase citizens’ well-being. We need clear guidelines on when and how to use behavioral science in policy.

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A Better Tool to Gather, Curate Research Findings

A Better Tool to Gather, Curate Research Findings

metaBUS, a free new online research tool, aims to help revolutionize social science research.

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Whose Work Most Influenced You? A Social Science Bites Retrospective

Whose Work Most Influenced You? A Social Science Bites Retrospective

In this first of three of montages from past Social Science Bites podcasts, 15 renowned social scientists reveal their pick for “Which piece of social science research has most inspired or most influenced you?”

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Recalling a Forgotten Anthropologist (and Victim) of Structural Racism

Recalling a Forgotten Anthropologist (and Victim) of Structural Racism

This Black History Month, remember the trailblazing work of an American anthropologist, Allison Davis, who both studied and was a victim of the nation’s entrenched racism.

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