Democracy Law and Human Rights Sandra Kresch Democracy Law and Human Rights Sandra Kresch

Democracy and “We the People” — How Responsible Citizens and Bold Ideas Can Bring about a Brighter Democratic Future

There is significant concern about threats to democracy and the potential for an increasing move toward authoritarianism around the world. Archon Fung, Director of Harvard’s Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation, is optimistic about the future of democracy and believes there is much individual citizens can do to assure that democracy remains healthy and vital.

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Education Susan Fine Education Susan Fine

Facing the Future: The Urgent Need for Innovation in Higher Education

Former college president Brian Rosenberg explores the pressing need for change in higher education and why the industry is resistant to even discussing the crisis it faces. He paints a stark picture of an industry at a crossroads, highlighting the urgent need for innovation, adaptation, and a reevaluation of structures and practices to continue fulfilling its essential societal role.

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SCOTUS Opinions on Student Admissions and Debt Harm Our Economy

OPINION COMMENTARY:

Achieving racial equity has gone beyond a moral imperative to become an economic imperative for this nation. Peter Williams explains how the Supreme Court’s decisions on affirmative action and student loan debt makes the problem worse.

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It Takes A Village: A Multi-Stakeholder Approach to Solving Homelessness in America

OPINION COMMENTARY:

To combat the homeless crisis in America, bureaucratic obstacles that hinder those in need must be overcome. Harvard ALI Fellows Melinda Giovengo and Betsy Schwartz critically examine HUD's Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing (HEARTH) Act and showcase how the Coalition for the Homeless of Houston, Texas has successfully implemented a multi-stakeholder approach.

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What Now? HBCUs Are Ready to Respond to the Supreme Court's Decision on Affirmative Action

OPINION COMMENTARY:

When the doors of college were reserved for whites only, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) gave African Americans the education they deserved and the strength to rise above bigotry. In the wake of the Supreme Court’s decisions that throttle affirmative action, 2021 Harvard ALI Fellow Terry Edmonds reminds us of the role HBCUs played in the past and the expanded role they may play now.

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Book Review: The Big Myth — How American Business Taught Us to Loathe Government and Love the Free Market

The Big Myth, by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, makes a compelling and well documented case that under the guise of protecting individual freedom, corporations and influential individuals organized to resist efforts to regulate industry. Oreskes and Conway peel away the cloak to expose concerted efforts across broad spectrums of society to propagandize against government efforts to protect the common good, to a point where any government intervention into the marketplace is labeled anti-capitalist. The book is not an assault on capitalism, but an assault on the myth that equates capitalism with freedom.

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Anniversary of Dobbs v. Jackson – Womens’ Loss of Reproductive Healthcare – From Crisis to Action: Innovative Strategies for Ensuring Access to Healthcare

This week marks the one-year anniversary of the Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey. The decision has had a devastating impact on women's health in the U.S. Cecile Richards, a national leader for women’s rights and social and economic justice and former President of Planned Parenthood Federation of America and Planned Parenthood Action Fund for 12 years, reflects on the decision, its impact, and an urgent path forward.

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An Affordable Housing Innovation That Begins in a Garage

In the Bay Area, many transformational business innovations have started in a garage. By converting often under-utilized garages into upscale living units, Rebecca Möller, founder of SYMBiHOM, takes the challenge of garage innovation quite literally and seeks to provide new affordable housing at a transformational scale.

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Education Stephanie Sylvestre Education Stephanie Sylvestre

Harnessing the Power of Generative AI to Close the Achievement Gap

OPINION COMMENTARY:

One of the biggest barriers to closing the achievement gap is access to tutoring and academic support. Stephanie Sylvestre, a technology executive, explains how generative artificial intelligence (AI), with robust safeguards, user involvement and education, can help bridge gaps in student performance, boost comprehension, and improve emotional well-being.

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Democracy Law and Human Rights Paulo Carvão Democracy Law and Human Rights Paulo Carvão

The Supreme Court Has Spoken on Gonzalez v Google – Now It’s Congress's Turn To Address Section 230

OPINION COMMENTARY:

Technology and the marketplace have changed substantially in the last three decades, and so must our expectations about the obligations of online platforms. The Supreme Court issued an opinion on Gonzalez v Google that increases the need for congressional action on Section 230 at the same time that generative AI is in front of society highlighting the dilemmas about the ethical use of data and algorithms.

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Democracy Law and Human Rights, Health Alice Lombardo Maher, MD Democracy Law and Human Rights, Health Alice Lombardo Maher, MD

New Communication Skills Can Bridge the Political Divide and Address the Extreme Polarization Threatening Democracy

OPINION COMMENTARY:

Fierce political polarization is threatening democracy in the world and acting as a barrier to crafting effective solutions to critical social challenges. Alice Lombardo Maher, MD, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, has succeeded in bridging the divide by bringing together people on opposite sides of the political spectrum and modeling the skills that are core to effective dialogue.

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All In: The Federal Government’s Plan to Tackling America's Homelessness Crisis

HEALTH & HOMELESSNESS SERIES:

The Biden Administration’s plan to reduce homelessness by 25% by 2025 is focused on preventing homelessness before it occurs in the first place. Jeff Olivet, executive director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness, discusses how they are urgently addressing basic needs of people in crisis, and expanding housing and support to help people get and stay housed.

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Social Enterprise and Economic Development, Democracy Law and Human Rights, Health Martin H. Goldstein and Matthew Nathan, MD Social Enterprise and Economic Development, Democracy Law and Human Rights, Health Martin H. Goldstein and Matthew Nathan, MD

Making House Calls to Those Who Have No House: A Street Psychiatrist’s Journey Supporting the Mental Health of Our Unhoused Neighbors

HEALTH & HOMELESSNESS SERIES:

Many think mental illness leads to homelessness, but a bidirectional relationship exists, and homelessness can lead to mental illness as well. Katherine Koh, MD, a practicing psychiatrist at the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program and Massachusetts General Hospital, discusses how her innovative practice of street psychiatry supports our unhoused neighbors.

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Combatting Los Angeles’ Homelessness Crisis Through Coordination, Outreach, and Support

HEALTH & HOMELESSNESS SERIES:

Inside Safe, Los Angeles’s program to reduce homelessness, recently achieved its ambitious goal of housing 1,000 people in its first 100 days. Dr. Va Lecia Adams Kellum, CEO of Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, discusses the nature of the challenge, the approach, and the city’s early progress.

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Health Tsion Andine Health Tsion Andine

Destigmatizing Mental Illness is Essential to Improve Mental Health in Developing Countries and Everywhere

OPINION COMMENTARY:

In low-and middle-income countries, the stigma of mental illness and the lack of resources keep up to 90% of those in need from receiving appropriate care. Tsion Andine, an MD/MPH student inspired by personal experience living with someone with a mental disorder, wants to improve this number by tapping caretakers and the media.

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Education Irvin L. Scott Education Irvin L. Scott

Faith in Public Schools: A Third Way

OPINION COMMENTARY:

Despite today’s polarized views about the role religion should play in U.S. public education, Dr. Irvin Scott, Senior Lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, argues that partnerships between faith groups and schools can provide critical support for our most vulnerable children.

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