ĀŅĀ×Ēæ¼é

Skip to content

Posts categorized Society & Culture

Posts Loop

Society & Culture
November 21, 2024 | 02:57 pm

Historic Bermuda reshapes our understanding of colonial America

Smithsonian Magazine highlights the role of a ĀŅĀ×Ēæ¼é historian and archaeologist in unearthing Bermudaā€™s colonial origins.

topics: Department of History, global engagement, Hajim School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Michael Jarvis, Program in Archaeology Technology and Historical Structures, School of Arts and Sciences,
Society & Culture
November 18, 2024 | 06:43 pm

Why the powerful are more likely to cheat

Psychologists have found a correlation between a personā€™s self-perception of power and their (un)willingness to remain faithful.

topics: Department of Psychology, Harry Reis, research finding, School of Arts and Sciences,
Society & Culture
October 31, 2024 | 02:48 pm

Research-backed ways to bridge Americaā€™s political divide

Researchers successfully tested 25 different approaches to reducing partisan animosity and support for undemocratic practices or political violence. Two proved most effective.

topics: Cameron Hecht, Department of Political Science, Department of Psychology, James Druckman, research finding, School of Arts and Sciences,
Society & Culture
October 30, 2024 | 11:05 am

What every American needs to know about voter turnout

ĀŅĀ×Ēæ¼é political scientists explain why people do and donā€™t exercise their right to voteā€”and the implications of that choice for democracy.

topics: Department of Political Science, James Druckman, Mayya Komisarchik, School of Arts and Sciences, Scott Tyson,
Society & Culture
October 24, 2024 | 01:02 pm

Imagining a world without police

A new book by Philip V. McHarris envisions a future where safety is not synonymous with policing, but rather prevention.

topics: Department of Black Studies, Philip McHarris, research finding, School of Arts and Sciences,
Society & Culture
September 11, 2024 | 03:52 pm

On thinning ice

A pair of ĀŅĀ×Ēæ¼é historians are chronicling the history of the worldā€™s glacial regionsā€”and human responses to their rapid disappearance.

topics: climate change, Department of History, global engagement, Humanities Center, research finding, research funding, School of Arts and Sciences, Stewart Weaver, sustainability, Tatyana Bakhmetyeva,
Society & Culture
July 31, 2024 | 07:12 am

Why the US-China trade war could last another five years

A ĀŅĀ×Ēæ¼é economist applies lessons from the 1980s to explain the United Statesā€™ current trade war with the potential superpower.

topics: Department of Economics, George Alessandria, research finding, School of Arts and Sciences,
Society & Culture
July 10, 2024 | 03:42 pm

Taking the temperature of American democracy

An interview with political scientist James Druckman, an expert on American democracy and polarization.Ā 

topics: Department of Political Science, James Druckman, School of Arts and Sciences,