Showing results 31 - 40 of 445
Jennifer Raab, Spring 2024 Hauser Leader, talks to us about the evolving landscape of leadership, shares insights on navigating difficult decisions and challenges related to…
This May, the Center for Public Leadership (CPL) Equity Fellows had the opportunity to travel to the Southwest as part of our annual policy field experience trip. As people deeply…
Vol. 10, Issue 23, Pages eadn2555
Over 30,000 field experiments with The Washington Post and Upworthy showed that readers prefer simpler headlines (e.g., more common words and more readable writing) over more…
At a moment when our democratic abilities seem to have eroded, and political, economic, and technological forces have weakened the capacity for collective action, People, Power,…
Conflict of interest is among the most regulated forms of official behavior. In the United States, the vast bureaucracy of the Office of Government Ethics (OGE) is almost entirely…
Portland, Oregon recently passed Measure 26-228, which represents some of the most expansive voting reforms by a major American city in recent history. Instead of being elected in…
Vol. 10, Issue 2, Pages 30-67
Paying reparations to Black Americans has long been contentiously debated. This article addresses an unexamined pillar of this debate: the United States has a long-standing social…
Vol. 35, Issue 2, Pages 23-39
The world is witnessing a loss of faith in both capitalism and democracy, which seemed nearly unimaginable just a generation ago. Many blame “the other party.” Others blame…
We present a conceptual framework of situational moderators of gender/sex effects in negotiation, risk-taking, and leadership—three masculine-stereotypic domains associated with…
Democracy is often described in two opposite ways, as either wonderfully resilient or dangerously fragile. Both characterizations can be correct, depending on the context. When…