Explore all Articles
filter by–Topic
filter by–Region
filter by–Country
search by–Keyword
Telecommunications Surveillance and Cryptography Regulatory Policy in Africa
05.16.13
Abstract This article examines regulatory policy of cryptography in Africa. Some consider public availability of strong cryptography to be a civil right. Whether used to protect sensitive information or verify identities, individuals and corporations alike benefit from cryptographic software in a world that is becoming increasingly networked. By the same token, users of cryptography might commit […]

Summer Snapshots: A Round-Up of HKS Summer Experiences
05.13.13
This summer, HKS students are traveling to all corners of the world to work on policymaking, advise nonprofits or conduct research. The ‘Summer Snapshots’ is a portrait of these experiences in which students — in their own words — share their stories, musings and reflections. Fernando Berdion del Valle is interning at a startup incubator in Mexico […]

Professors defend student dissertation on immigrant IQs
05.10.13
By Chrissie Long, Staff Writer Responding to criticism of a dissertation written by a former PhD student on the IQs of immigrants, Harvard Kennedy School Professor Richard Zeckhauser defended the thesis, saying the “empirical work was careful.” “None of his advisors would have accepted his thesis had he thought that his empirical work was tilted or […]
Dean David Ellwood responds to Harvard dissertation on immigrant IQ
05.10.13
The following statement was released by Harvard Kennedy School Dean David Ellwood on Friday: “I most certainly understand that this issue, as reported, troubles many people. In response I offer three thoughts. First, the views and conclusions of any graduate of this school are theirs alone, and do not represent the views of Harvard or […]

Who Started the Mexican Drug War?
05.2.13
BY VIRIDIANA RIOS At an undetermined time, somewhere in Mexico, a violent war among drug cartels erupted. For too long it was difficult to elaborate—with absolute certainty—on that statement. Just after the turn of the millennium, drug lords who had “peacefully” conducted operations to introduce cocaine and other illegal substances into the United States since […]

Winning the War on Corruption: The Six-Step Solution
05.2.13
BY ABIGAIL BELLOWS If you are a child in India under the age of five, there is a 42 percent chance you are suffering from malnutrition. According to Reuters, every day across India, three-thousand children your age will die as a result. The government of India runs the world’s largest food distribution system for the […]

The Regularity of Irregular War
05.2.13
BY JONATHAN E. HILLMAN A Book Review of Invisible Armies: An Epic History of Guerrilla Warfare from Ancient Times to the Present by Max Boot. If there was ever a funeral for U.S. counterinsurgency doctrine, former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates delivered the eulogy. In February 2011, as reported in the New York Times, Gates told cadets […]

One Hit Too Many: The Moral Responsibility of Football Fandom
05.2.13
BY MARK DIAZ TRUMAN I was a junior in college before football fandom got its hooks into me. A few friends and I bonded over my fledgling love for the Denver Broncos, one of the only sports teams close enough to my home state of New Mexico to catch my interest. On Sundays we would […]

Existential Heroines: Zero Dark Thirty and Homeland
05.2.13
BY IRENE SHIH Much has been made this year about Zero Dark Thirty, Hollywood’s first stab at dramatizing the Central Intelligence Agency’s (CIA) hunt for Osama bin Laden. Even Graham Allison, professor of government and founding dean of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, has written about the Oscar-nominated film. A […]

Spotlight on Anne-Marie Slaughter: A Conversation with the Foreign Policy Guru, Writer, and Feminist
05.2.13
Anne-Marie Slaughter is the Bert G. Kerstetter ’66 University Professor of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton University. From 2009 to 2011 she served as Director of Policy Planning for the U.S. Department of State, the first woman to hold that position. Hanna Siegel is a 2013 Master in Public Policy candidate at the John […]

Calling for More Hanin Zoabis: Why Israeli Arab Political Parties Should Prioritize Recruiting and Promoting Women
05.2.13
BY CATHERINE LELAND She’s the “most hated woman in Israel,” according to Foreign Policy magazine, and it doesn’t bother her at all.[i] Hanin Zoabi—a member of the Knesset, the legislative branch of the Israeli government—is, undeniably, a force. Elected in 2009, Zoabi is the first Palestinian Arab female elected to the Israeli parliament through an […]

The Power to Change the World? The Role of Sport in Development
05.2.13
BY DAVID TANNENWALD In May 2000, Nelson Mandela stood before a microphone, prepared to address the inaugural Laureus World Sports Awards ceremony. Never more than a recreational athlete, Mandela might seem an odd choice to serve as the patron of a global sports gala. But the event’s proceeds were going to charities harnessing sport to […]