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A Call to Action: Addressing the Historic Underfunding of AAPI Communities

05.13.22

The rise of hate against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic has drawn attention to the need to better support AAPI communities across our country — communities that have historically been drastically underfunded and under-resourced. This article focuses on how the philanthropic community and beyond can close critical gaps […]

Gender, Race and Identity
Woman helps a young girl cut food, in front of them is a table with glasses and a bowl of food

Alleviating the Impacts of Covid-19 on Women through Economic Development: A Personal Perspective 

05.9.22

In October 2021, the Biden Administration released its National Strategy on Gender Equity and Equality.[1] In recognition of the barriers that prevent those who identify as women, primarily women of color and trans women, from achieving their full potential, it established the White House Gender Policy Council to execute ten interconnected and intersectional priorities core […]

Combating Employment Discrimination Against Sikhs and Others: Religious Rights, Personal Protective Equipment, and the COVID-19 Pandemic

05.9.22

This piece was published in the 32nd print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. The intersection of religious rights, PPE constraints, and the urgency of the COVID-19 pandemic made clear the need for better guidelines that fairly and consistently interpret the law and hold employers accountable when they fail to respect their employees’ rights. […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Data Sharing in the Age of COVID-19: Why EHR Vendors Need a Closer Look

05.6.22

Amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, insufficient health data sharing among electronic health record (EHR) systems in the U.S. has hindered our efforts to track the virus, contain its spread, and treat our most vulnerable patients. An effective COVID-19 response requires timely and coordinated information sharing across all layers of the health care system. Although medical […]

Anti-Asian Racism and Discrimination: Implications within the Field of Medicine

05.6.22

This piece was published in the 32nd print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. The model minority stereotype initially embraced by many AAPIs was a welcome alternative to the prior “Yellow Peril” label, yielding an uneasy collusion that is now being exposed as the hollow prize it is in the era of COVID-19. An […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Nuclear Nightmare: Made in America

05.4.22

The Marshall Islands may look like a tropical paradise from a distance, but such beauty hides deadly radiation and mass destruction of the environment and culture from repeated nuclear testing. After sixty years of evading legal and moral responsibility, the United States must address this dark nuclear legacy and the injustices inflicted on the people […]

International Relations and Security

Making The Cut: The Ramifications of Drug Pricing Reform in the U.S.

05.4.22

Astronomically high drug prices are not a new issue in the wild world that is United States healthcare. The U.S. tends to spend far more on the same prescription medications than most of the world, and this has significant impacts on patients’ health and financial outcomes. Forty percent of patients attribute difficulty affording medications as […]

Diasporic Anti-Racism

05.2.22

African history did not begin and end with the Transatlantic Slave Trade. It began with the birth and advancement of human civilization. Ancient Africans weren’t barbaric and uncultured, but the progenitors of modern humanity. From the world’s oldest universities and empires to the shapers of society, Africa was the foundation of humanity. Across the world, […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Elder Care in COVID-19: Navigating Filial Duty and Loss

05.2.22

This piece was published in the 32nd print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. With Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders constituting the fastest growing ethnic group sixty-five years and older in the US today, and the projection that fifteen percent of the total US Asian Pacific Islander population will be over the age of […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Ask What You Can Do, Harvard Kennedy School

05.2.22

“Specialists without spirit, sensualists without heart”. Writing about bureaucracy in 1904, little did German sociologist Max Weber know that his description could extend to the Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) in 2022. Next month, hundreds of students will don regalia for their HKS graduations. They will leave Cambridge having been insufficiently prepared by HKS to be […]

Uncategorized

Missing the Other Side in Palestine and Israel

05.1.22

Last week, Harvard Law School hosted the event Bearing Witness, during which participants of the Palestine Spring Break Trek (Pal-Trek) reflected on their experiences. The event provided a valuable opportunity to hear from my friends on the trek sharing stories about what they saw and learned. However, it became apparent that Pal-Trek, with its focus […]

Uncategorized

Does development have a diversity problem?

05.1.22

To some, this question may seem absurd. The work of development is to improve quality of life and expand economic opportunity across diverse global communities, and graduate programs such as the MPA/ID program at HKS are enormously diverse in national origin, gender, and professional and lived experience. Yet, a 2020 survey of MPA/ID alumni (which […]

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