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Why a Resilient Taiwan Benefits Everyone: An Interview with Taiwanese Diplomat Charles Liao
Read and listen to an interview between HKS SPR and Taiwanese Diplomat Charles Liao, Director-General of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office (TECO) of Boston.Explore all Articles
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American States Are Quietly Embracing the ‘Baby Bonds’ Revolution to Fight Inequality
04.8.24
As inequality rises because of the combined curse of growing inherited wealth and the perpetuation of the generational transmission of poverty, baby bonds appear to be a powerful tool to tackle one of the major challenges of the 21st century.

The Capacity Building Imperative to Improve India’s Public Education
04.4.24
With evolving workforce demands, the expectations from India’s education systems have expanded beyond achieving universal enrollment and basic literacy and numeracy. It now needs to equip students with 21st-century skills.

Justice for…a Few: Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice System of the United States
04.3.24
We need a system that protects minorities from being victims of unpunished crime and from criminalization. We must become a society that no longer takes skin color as a reason to justify the unjustifiable.

The “Greedy Work” of Foreign Service: On the Status of Women in the Diplomatic Corps of Kazakhstan
03.8.24
Women in high-level positions can offer unique perspectives based on their diverse experiences. A more diverse Foreign Service that reflects Kazakhstan will result in enhanced policymaking, reporting, and analysis.

Statistical Invisibility and the Plight of India’s Sanitation Workers: A Policy Perspective
03.3.24
Amidst the vast societal machinery that sustains India, sanitation workers operate as the unrecognized cogs essential to the public health system, yet they remain largely invisible within policy frameworks and legislative agendas.

A New Draft for America? A Service Year by Young Americans Would Protect America and Maybe Heal It Along the Way
02.25.24
The idea of a service year for young Americans has been floated around for decades but with no substantive action. A definitive first step to push young Americans in a year of service starts with encouraging colleges to require them before matriculation or to weigh the experience heavily in admissions decisions.

Do I Really Have To Eat This? The Follies of Food Loss
02.9.24
As a child, there was one golden rule: Don’t waste food. Aid organizations that address hunger and food security would do better to focus on creating access to food than pandering to people’s emotions about throwing it away.

Interview with Harvard Professor Graham Allison: U.S.–China Relations
12.19.23
On December 5, 2023, Senior Editor Nikolas Neos spoke with Harvard Professor Graham Allison about US-China relations and what the rising tension between the two countries means for both of them.

Interview with U.S. Ambassador (Ret.) Djerejian: U.S. Response to the Israel-Hamas War
11.8.23
On November 3, 2023, HKS Student Policy Review Senior Editor Samriddhi Vij sat down with former U.S. Ambassador to Israel and Syria, Edward Djerejian, to discuss the Israel-Hamas war.

Special Interests’ Hold on State Courts: The Need for a Fourth Wave of Judicial Election Reform
06.25.23
History presents a clear lesson: when judicial independence and competence wanes, it’s time for meaningful reform.

Global Governance, Climate Change, and International Security: Aligning Issues to Compel Action
06.17.23
Failure to recognize and manage the nexus of the relationship between climate and security could have significant ramifications in the future between and within countries and communities. Without considering these, efforts to promote sustainable development and peace may fall short.

We Can’t Go Back. Private Universities Must Counter the Attack on Gender Studies
05.12.23
In this article, Mara Bolis presents the argument for private universities to defend intersectional gender studies from new laws restricting discussions of gender, race, sexuality, inequality and even American history at public institutions.