Carnegie Reporter Summer 2020
Global Crises, Opportunities, Informed Action | Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Societal and Political Change in the Middle East | What Is Sectarianization? | 1920/2020: Is It Déjà Vu All Over Again? | Who Counts? What Counts? | Re-Focus: Thinking in New Ways with Data Visualizations | Children Are Counting on the 2020 Census | Beyond STEM in Africa | How to Hack Your Foreign Policy | Carnegie Mellon’s CREATE Lab | Notable Events | Carnegie Bookshelf
- Carnegie ConversationsIran, Saudi Arabia, and Societal and Political Change in the Middle East
How did we get here? And where are we going? Lina Khatib, Karim Sadjadpour, and Hillary Wiesner debate shifting conflict dynamics in the region
Carnegie Reporter Summer 2020Arab Region Transitions
- What History Can Teach UsWhat the First World War Can Teach Us about Misjudging Tech and Social Change
Global threats like the coronavirus pandemic are transforming the world today. An existential truth has emerged: technological advances are outstripping political capacity and imagination.
Carnegie Reporter Summer 2020Emerging Global Order - Book ReviewWhat Is Sectarianization?
Program director, Hillary Wiesner, reviews Kim Ghattas' latest that explores how identities and pasts are invented and used to produce power in the Middle East and beyond
Carnegie Reporter Summer 2020Arab Region Transitions
- ReadHow to Hack Your Foreign Policy: Assessing America’s Place in the Global Order
Against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic and the upcoming 2020 presidential election, what’s next?
Carnegie Reporter Summer 2020Emerging Global Order - WatchThe Making of a Humanities Scholar: Beyond STEM in Africa
A distinguished African professor argues that the humanities together with STEM are necessary to build Uganda and infuse its development with values and ethics
Carnegie Reporter Summer 2020African Academics
- ReadWho Counts? What Counts? The 2020 Census and Beyond
The census will impact virtually every aspect of American life for the next decade, informing the distribution of $8 trillion in public funds for a range of social services. But it’s not all about money. The census is key to the allocation of political power
Carnegie Reporter Summer 2020Census
- ReadChildren Are Counting on the 2020 Census
An accurate 2020 U.S. Census count, currently underway, will ensure that communities receive necessary resources, allocations, and representation
Carnegie Reporter Summer 2020Census