17916 Items

Smog over Beijing's Forbidden City

Wikimedia CC/Brian Jeffery Beggerly

Broadcast Appearance - Living on Earth

China Leads on Climate

| Oct. 16, 2020

At the annual UN General Assembly, President Xi of China pledged that his nation would peak its carbon emissions before 2030 and hit net zero emissions by 2060, without revealing how the nation plans to reach those goals. Joe Aldy, an economist and Professor of Public Policy at Harvard's Kennedy School, joins Host Steve Curwood to discuss what this step by the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitter means for international climate policy in the context of the failed climate leadership by the Trump Administration.

An abstract design

N. Hanacek/NIST

Policy Brief

The Public-Purpose Consortium: Enabling Emerging Technology with a Public Mission

| October 2020

We are at a moment in time where cooperation between public-purpose stakeholders and profit-motive stakeholders can be an effective means of integrating public purpose into technology as it emerges. This brief covers the basic concept of a public-purpose consortium (PPC), examination of what combination of factors lead to their use for emerging technologies, and considers the key principles for organizing PPCs and enabling their success: Build Community, Enable Cooperation, Ensure Value, Institute Governance, and Keep It Lightweight.

During a live fireside chat, Ash Carter and WIRED Editor-in-Chief Nicholas Thompson spoke with Tech Spotlight recipients about how their innovations serve the public good.

Zoom Screenshot

News - Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School

Belfer Center’s Technology and Public Purpose Project Spotlights Outstanding Technologies for Public Good

| Oct. 15, 2020

In its inaugural Tech Spotlight recognition ceremony today, TAPP celebrated three outstanding technologies that represent the best in responsible development and deployment of technology for the public good.

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Analysis & Opinions - The National Interest

China Is Now the World’s Largest Economy. We Shouldn’t Be Shocked.

| October 15, 2020

China has now displaced the U.S. to become the largest economy in the world. Measured by the more refined yardstick that both the IMF and CIA now judge to be the single best metric for comparing national economies, the IMF Report shows that China’s economy is one-sixth larger than America’s ($24.2 trillion versus the U.S.’s $20.8 trillion). Why can't we admit reality? What does this mean?

Analysis & Opinions - Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School

Questions from Quarantine: Halloween and COVID-19

The Security and Global Health Project is proud to present a weekly web series with Security Mom Juliette Kayyem and Medicine Mom Dr. Margaret Bourdeaux. Each week, our experts will answer your questions from quarantine and give you advice on staying sane and sanitary in a global crisis. We hope you'll join our Moms every Tuesday, and if you have a question that you want answered, tweet with #QuestionsFromQuarantine.

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Analysis & Opinions - The Harvard Political Review

Science, Society, and Security: Politicization in the Age of COVID-19

| Oct. 14, 2020

In the very long term, the right leadership dynamics, improved crisis management, and institutional memory will allow these scientific bodies to regain public trust. In the present, however, the politicization of the science surrounding COVID-19 has crippled our response to the pandemic and will continue to do so if we continue along this path.

Journal Article - Quarterly Journal: International Security

Correspondence: Clandestine Capabilities and Technological Diffusion Risks

| Fall 2020

David M. Allison and Stephen Herzog respond to Brendan Rittenhouse Green and Austin Long’s winter 2019/20 article, “Conceal or Reveal? Managing Clandestine Military Capabilities in Peacetime Competition.”