Richard Arenberg comments in The Washington Post, "Arenberg said the process around the Clinton trial worked because 'Majority Leader [Trent Lott], and the Democratic Leader [Tom Daschle] were very determined to protect the dignity of the Senate and to carry out the proceedings in a manner that did justice to the Constitution.'"
Jeff Colgan in Al Jazeera, "Investors around the world are thinking, 'You know, long term we have to be worried about stranded assets in fossil fuels' and that's a real concern for not just Norway, but other investors around the world."
This piece mentions that John Friedman, professor of economics and international and public affairs, worked in collaboration with Raj Chetty to create Opportunity Insights - an institute aimed at making success and social mobility a widespread and equal possibility across America.
Adam Levine in News 1st, "...As a fully endowed center within the Watson Institute, CHRHS will have a sustainable source of funding, allowing us to broaden our collaborations with humanitarian and human rights agencies globally and develop long term research and training initiatives..."
Stephen Kinzer in The Boston Globe, "Americans see the history of US-Iran relations as beginning and ending with the hostage crisis. Iranians see that history quite differently: shaped almost entirely by the 1953 coup. Until these two countries come to a common understanding of what we have done to each other, peace will remain remote."
Jeff Colgan in VOA News, "American oil companies would face a host of practical difficulties in operating there. Legal difficulties, practical challenges - so this would not be easy to do and I'm not sure they would be actually eager to do it."
Jeff Colgan in TIME, "A big part of the strategy of defeating ISIS was actually to try to disrupt the oil supply chain, to take out tankers carrying oil, or to destroy any kind of refineries, any sort of ISIS oil operations. The net result was Kurdish forces and U.S. forces helped occupy the territory where the oil fields are."
Jeff Colgan in Reuters, "The idea that the United States would 'keep the oil' in the hands of ExxonMobil or some other U.S. company is immoral and possibly illegal."
Richard Arenberg in VICE, "At this point, it seems hard to imagine that the House won't ultimately impeach the president...Ambassador Taylor's statement was devastating."
Stephen Kinzer on WBUR, "Let's try to promote projects that unify Syria and if the Kurd's want to unify with the central government of Syria and if anyone else wants to do that, that's good for promoting an end to the war and the prospect of a secular Syria - making political progress over the next generation."
Ashutosh Varshney provides commentary in NewsClick, "The pre-existing local networks of civic engagement between the two communities [Hindus and Muslims] stand out as the single most important proximate explanation for the difference between peace and violence."
Emily Oster in The Atlantic, "Studies have shown that the more physicians are paid for C-sections relative to vaginal births, the higher the C-section rates become."
Stephen Kinzer in The Boston Globe, "This war will only end when the government re-establishes its authority over all of Syrian territory and hostile foreign forces withdraw."
John Friedman cited in ProPublica, "It highlighted a 2013 study by Brown University professor John Friedman, a former Obama National Economic Council official, to make the point that the program had been successful in generating "Free Tax Returns Outside of Free File."
Jayanti Owens reflects on past research revealing the dramatic, identifiable differences between boys and girls in the levels of self-regulation and social skills when beginning school at age four.
The new book by Brown physicist S. James Gates Jr. and Cathie Pelletier tells the stories of astronomers who worked for a decade to get images of a solar eclipse, which ultimately showed Einstein's theory of relativity was correct.
Rich Arenberg in VICE, "If they are stonewalled now, they'll take it as further evidence of obstruction. And they can drop all that evidence into a second article of impeachment."
Stephen Kinzer, Senior Fellow at the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University and former New York Times Bureau Chief for Nicaragua, Germany and Turkey discusses his new book surrounding the CIA's secret medical experiments of the 1950's and 60's. The book draws from original interviews, survivor testimonies and documentary research.
Stephen Kinzer in the Boston Globe, "War is lamentably part of the human condition, and although world peace is among the noblest of goals, it will never be fully achieved."
This opinion piece mentions that John Friedman, professor of economics and international and public affairs, contributed to research that used artificial intelligence to track large groups of people and determine the outcomes in their participation in various welfare programs.
Increasingly, scholars at Brown are turning to podcasts to shed light on a broad spectrum of the groundbreaking research and original ideas emanating from College Hill.
Stephen Kinzer in the Boston Globe, "Today we face the same temptation. It feeds government's impulse to do things secretly — whether that means spying on citizens, launching a cyber-attack, or deploying troops to a distant combat zone. Cover-ups fail, however, and secrets eventually leak out. That feeds Americans' suspicion that much of what shapes our lives is unseen."
In the Boston Globe, Stephen Kinzer writes, "Last month it was announced that the five surviving alleged plotters of the 9/11 attack will finally be brought to trial in 2021. If they are aware of what is happening in the world, they will arrive in court with a deep sense of satisfaction."
Stephen Kinzer talks to Terry Gross on NPR's Fresh Air about his new book, Poisoner in Chief, "The CIA mind control project, MK-ULTRA, was essentially a continuation of work that began in Japanese and Nazi concentration camps."
This opinion piece by Stephanie Savell, co-director of the Costs of War project, cites its new report, which concludes that as long as U.S. military policy in Somalia targets al-Shabaab as a terrorist group, confronting it with the counterinsurgency tactics of U.S.-led war of terrorism, it won't work.
In the New York Times, "In a paper that parallels the work of Petersen and his colleagues, Rose McDermott and Peter K. Hatemi, political scientists at Brown and Penn State, argue that Trump and other right-wing populist leaders have tapped into evolutionarily based "tribal sentiments and drives."
Stephen Kinzer in the Boston Globe, "Moments after midnight in the heart of Africa, a plane carrying one of the 20th century's greatest peacemakers fell from the air. The crash site was immediately sealed. A quick inquiry blamed pilot error. The wreckage was buried. Only now, more than half a century later, is a fuller truth beginning to emerge."
Review of Stephen Kinzers new book, Poisoner in Chief: Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control, "It is also frightening to read . . . [and] compelling, not least in the way it illustrates how the law of unintended consequences in covert action can work with an almost delirious vengeance."
On Market Watch, Eric Patashnik recommends a list of questions to ask your doctor in order to minimize your risk of being offered treatments you don't need.
Senior Fellow Richard Arenberg on The Hill, "President Donald Trump and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) agree on one thing: the elimination of the filibuster in the Senate. And now former Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has lent his weight to that demand."
The Costs of War project is cited in the New York Times, "The military accounts for more than half of discretionary federal spending. Since the attacks of Sept. 11, the counterterrorism wars have cost an estimated $5.9 trillion, according to the Costs of War project at Brown University, thus adding to the ballooning national debt with which future generations will have to reckon."