In a unique research collaboration, students make the case for less e-waste
SERC Scholars from around the MIT community examine the electronic hardware waste life cycle and climate justice.
SERC Scholars from around the MIT community examine the electronic hardware waste life cycle and climate justice.
International research co-led by Professor Fotini Christia finds an approach lauded in the US works differently in other regions.
Volha Charnysh’s new book examines refugees and state-building in Germany and Poland after World War II, as new residents spurred economic and civic growth.
Alumni and founders of MIT Washington Summer Internship Program reflect on three decades of impact.
Political science PhD student Kunal Singh identifies a suite of strategies states use to prevent other nations from developing nuclear weapons.
Researchers in the MIT Initiative on Combatting Systemic Racism are building an open data repository to advance research on racial inequity in domains like policing, housing, and health care.
In a lecture at MIT, Professor Adam Berinsky surveyed one of the thorniest ongoing problems in modern politics.
At a recent Starr Forum, scholars gathered to discuss the global perception of the upcoming presidential election and the influence of American politics.
David Singer, head of the MIT Department of Political Science, discusses the Strengthening Democracy Initiative, focused on the rigorous study of elections, public opinion, and political participation.
Faculty members granted tenure in anthropology; comparative media studies/writing; philosophy; political science; and science, technology, and society.
With $45 million in support from the Stanton Foundation, the program will expand its longstanding leadership in a critical area of global security.
While women and men self-reported similar vaccination rates, unvaccinated women had less intention to get vaccinated than men.
MIT spinout SiTration looks to disrupt industries with a revolutionary process for recovering and extracting critical materials.
Rising superpowers like China are “cautious opportunists” in global institutions, and the U.S. should avoid overreaction, PhD student Raymond Wang argues.