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Professional development at HKS: A missed opportunity?

02.24.14

Both the school and the students need to focus on professional development to make the most of the Kennedy School experience By Varun Bhandari It’s a cold February and recruitment season is underway at HKS. Students are burnishing their resumes, attending presentations, networking furiously, all hoping to land an internship or a job at their […]

Cross-Check

02.24.14

By Simon R. Bone I expect almost all of you have flown through Boston Logan at some point in the last six months. That cold triangular gateway to learning and lifestyle. Seeking refuge your plane descends and turns over the Boston Harbor. It turns again. You feel it shudder and face resistance against physics as […]

Greek Health Minister visit to HKS attracts media attention

02.24.14

By Simon R. Bone Greek Health Minister Adonis Georgiadis is not an easy to forget person. He attracts attention wherever he goes and his visit to Harvard Kennedy School on Feb 13-14 was not an exception. Right after his arrival in Boston and as a loyal user of the social media, Mr. Georgiadis posted some pictures […]

Damon in the Forum

02.24.14

By Tim Purinton The Ghent Altarpiece, Nazi thieves and Matt Damon took the screen at a recent Institute of Politics (IOP) forum event. Monuments Men, a glossy, big-budget Hollywood production features the fate of the western worlds’ great art works including a fiercely sought after Michelangelo masterwork plundered by the Nazis during World War II. […]

Harvard German Conference

02.24.14

By Simon R. Bone Harvard paid host to a weekend-long conference on German culture and politics over the Valentine’s weekend at Radcliffe Yard. The conference which was sponsored by many multinational companies attracted several hundred Germonphile delegates from around the world and was the 15th year this conference has been held. Offering panel discussions and […]

JohnnyWeirSwan

Op-ed: The importance of adding figure skating to the gay rights agenda

02.23.14

The public incorrectly assumes all male figure skaters are out and proud. Newsweek published an article last month overviewing homophobia in figure skating titled “The Frozen Closet.” Even Jonny Weir, the flamboyant two-time Olympian, didn’t publicly come out until he stopped competing, and there were no publicly out competitors in this crop of American male figure skaters at the […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Interview with Ms. Lise Grande, Former UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative in South Sudan

02.21.14

Ms. Lise Grande has worked for the United Nations since 1994, serving in Armenia, Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, East Timor, Haiti, Occupied Palestine, South Sudan, Sudan, and Tajikistan. Ms Grande has worked in some of the United Nations’ largest humanitarian and peace-keeping operations and is now serving as the UN Resident Coordinator in India. […]

Human Rights

Adventures in Presidential History

02.17.14

BY THOMAS TOBIN As the nation celebrates Presidents’ Day and students nationwide enjoy the long weekend, this holiday is a time to reflect on the nation’s highest office. U.S. Presidential history is rife with stories of political intrigue, personal triumph, and leadership in turbulent times. Yet while some presidents are carved into mountains or enshrined […]

Politics

Why We Need Corporate Tax Reform

02.15.14

BY ELLIOTT LONG  In 1943, corporate income tax collections accounted for 40 percent of total tax collections. By 2012, they accounted for just 9.7 percent—a 76 percent decrease in less than a century. An examination into the factors contributing to this decline reveals several alarming trends that, if left unchecked, will only lead to further […]

Should Cities Use Hackathons to Solve Social Problems? Lessons from America’s Datafest at Harvard

02.11.14

BY ALISON FLINT I first learned about hackathons when I saw an ad for an event called Datafest hosted at Stanford University three years ago. Like most people, I primarily associated ‘hacking’ with computer programming. However, this Datafest looked different. It turned out that Teresa Bouza, a Knight Fellow at Stanford, had organized the hackathon […]

Syria’s Polio Outbreak: What, If Anything, Can We Learn?

02.10.14

Before the escalation of the Syrian conflict, general immunization rates for Syrian children were more than 90% [1]. Today, less than 70% of Syrian children are immunized [2]. This deterioration has manifested itself in at least 13 cases of polio as of November 2013 [3], a striking number for a debilitating disease eradicated in Syria more than a […]

Healthcare

Digital Mobs & Outrage Generation

02.10.14

BY CLAIRE LEHMANN The political divide between conservatives and liberals is growing increasingly bitter. Each side thinks that the other is evil. At the same time, a new currency is emerging within the eco-chambers of social media. It is the currency of outrage, and it is eroding our ability to listen to one another. Those […]

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