"As AI becomes more capable, many of us will be left wondering: Who are we beyond our work, our titles, our productivity?" ...
From the university classrooms of London and Toronto to the study desks of Delhi and Dubai, academic writing today demands ...
Michael C. Munger, Ph.D., professor of economics, political science and public policy at Duke University, was the principal ...
Last year’s winners of the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences, given in memory of Alfred Nobel, were Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James A. Robinson. The researchers were honored for ...
Today we’re all getting smarter about some of the economic and political terms dominating the headlines these days. Terms ...
Ashish Sedai honored for research showing how stronger relationships between parents benefit children’s well-being ...
In the second annual "Reimagining Democracy" webinar series, professor Francis Fukuyama dove into the root causes of democracy’s current crisis. He discussed how declining trust, civic disengagement ...
In every age of human history, technology has reshaped the way people live, work, and understand themselves. The printing ...
The Army’s transformation from largely a ceremonial role to a fighting force cannot be examined without taking into ...
Below you will find the biweekly listings of the seminars, events and workshops organised by the Department and by the research centres. For the CFM/LSE Money-Macro Workshop series, see here. View the ...
Chapter 1 explores how governments can improve economic growth prospects by enhancing the efficiency and composition of public spending, while keeping the overall spending envelope unchanged.
After decades of increasing global economic integration, the world is facing the risk of fragmentation. A shallow and uneven recovery from the global financial crisis (GFC) was followed by Brexit, U.S ...