Why smart infrastructure is a smart investment—for both Democrats and Republicans—in an era of historic public works spending
PolicyCast
by Stephen Goldsmith, Ralph Ranalli
1M ago
As the U.S. prepares to spend hundreds of billions on new projects, HKS Professor Stephen Goldsmith says successfully upgrading our infrastructure will not only require spending all that money smartly, but spending it on infrastructure that is itself smart—full of sensors that can anticipate problems before they require costly repairs and that serve multiple functions instead of just one. With the passage of 2021’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the 2022’s Inflation Reduction Act, the federal government has ushered in levels of infrastructure spending we haven’t seen sin ..read more
Visit website
Why smart infrastructure is a smart investment—even for Republicans—in an era of historic public works spending
PolicyCast
by Stephen Goldsmith, Ralph Ranalli
1M ago
As the U.S. prepares to spend hundreds of billions on new projects, HKS Professor Stephen Goldsmith says successfully upgrading our infrastructure will not only require spending all that money smartly, but spending it on infrastructure that is itself smart—full of sensors that can anticipate problems before they require costly repairs and that serve multiple functions instead of just one. With the passage of 2021’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the 2022’s Inflation Reduction Act, the federal government has ushered in levels of infrastructure spending we haven’t seen sin ..read more
Visit website
Transitioning to clean power without workers absorbing the shock
PolicyCast
by Gordon Hanson, James Stock, Ralph Ranalli
2M ago
Harvard Kennedy School Professor Gordon Hanson and Harvard Vice Provost for Climate and Sustainability James Stock say an important part of the green energy transition will be mitigating its effects on employment, both in the United States and overseas. Talking about the clean energy transition can conjure up images of commuters using sleek electric trains and electric cars powered by the sun and wind, and of workers with good-paying jobs installing the infrastructure of the future. But the outlook for communities that are economically tied to the fossil fuel economy that will be left behind i ..read more
Visit website
Local news is civic infrastructure. And it’s crumbling. Can we save it?
PolicyCast
by Nancy Gibbs, Thomas Patterson, Ralph Ranalli
3M ago
Harvard Kennedy School professors Nancy Gibbs and Tom Patterson say local news is civic infrastructure. And it's crumbling. Like bridges, local news organizations use facts to help people connect with each other over the chasm of partisan political divides. People need reliable information to make important decisions about their lives—Where should I send my child to school? Who should I vote for? Should I buy a bigger house or a new car?—just as much as they need breathable air, clean water, and safe roads. Unfortunately, internet-driven market forces have cut traditional sources of revenue by ..read more
Visit website
There's groundbreaking new science to help cut methane emissions, but is there the political will?
PolicyCast
by Robert Stavins, Daniel Jacob, Ralph Ranalli
4M ago
Harvard Kennedy School Professor Robert Stavins and Professor Daniel Jacob of Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences are at the forefront of new efforts to monitor and control methane, a potent greenhouse gas. It used to seem like methane wasn't such a big deal. It was that other climate gas, the one that was the butt of cow flatulence jokes and that only stayed in the atmosphere for a decade or so. But since important global warming targets are now just 7 years away and science has developed a better understanding of both methane’s pervasiveness and its potent role in warming th ..read more
Visit website
There's groundbreaking new science to help cut methane emissions, but do we have the political will?
PolicyCast
by Robert Stavins, Daniel Jacob, Ralph Ranalli
4M ago
Harvard Kennedy School Professor Rob Stavins and Professor Daniel Jacob of Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences are at the forefront of new efforts to monitor and control methane, a potent greenhouse gas. It used to seem like methane wasn't such a big deal. It was that other climate gas, the one that was the butt of cow flatulence jokes and that only stayed in the atmosphere for a decade or so. But since important global warming targets are now just 7 years away and science has developed a better understanding of both methane’s pervasiveness and its potent role in warming the a ..read more
Visit website
Joe Aldy on the complex economics of the clean energy transition
PolicyCast
by Joe Aldy, Susan Hughes, Ralph Ranalli
4M ago
Economist and Harvard Kennedy School Professor Joe Aldy says  possibly the most complex—and one of the most existentially important—problems facing humanity is how to pull out the roots of fossil fuel infrastructure that are so deeply embedded in the global economy. The work is complex and the scale is immense; In fact it’s been said that transitioning the global economy from fossil fuels to sustainable sources will require the largest reallocation of capital in human history. Meanwhile Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its willingness to weaponize oil and natural gas distribution was a si ..read more
Visit website
Goals and realities: What World Cup performances can teach us about development in African countries
PolicyCast
by Matt Andrews, Susan Hughes, Ralph Ranalli
6M ago
Matt Andrews, the faculty director of the Building State Capability program at Harvard Kennedy School, says the reasons why African nations haven’t done better at soccer’s world championships have a lot in common with why much of the continent’s economic promise has also gone unfulfilled. The World Cup, the biggest championship in soccer—or football, depending on where you are from—is currently underway and it's one of the two most-watched sporting events on the planet, the other being the Olympic Games. Yet even though it’s a world-wide event, the list of World Cup champions is dominated by E ..read more
Visit website
Why women are authoritarianism’s targets—and how they can be its undoing
PolicyCast
by Erica Chenoweth, Zoe Marks, Susan Hughes, Ralph Ranalli
7M ago
Harvard Kennedy School Professor Erica Chenoweth and Lecturer in Public Policy Zoe Marks say the parallel global trends of rising authoritarianism and attempts to roll back women’s rights are no coincidence. The hard won rights women have attained over the past century—to education, to full participation in the workforce, in politics, and civic life, and to reproductive healthcare—have transformed society and corresponded with historic waves of democratization around the world. But they have also increasingly become the target of authoritarian leaders and regimes looking to displace democracy ..read more
Visit website
Former Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Löfven on stemming the tide of right-wing authoritarianism
PolicyCast
by Stefan Löfven, Susan Hughes, Ralph Ranalli
7M ago
During his 7 years leading Sweden’s government from 2014 to 2021, Stefan Löfven had a front row seat to observe the rise of right-wing and neo-fascist political parties both at home and around Europe. A former welder, and union leader from working class roots, Löfven earned the nickname “the escape artist” during his years as prime minister for his knack for holding together governments despite his country’s increasingly fractious and polarized politics. But this year the Sweden Democrats—a party with its roots in fascist and white nationalist ideology—became the second leading vote-getter and ..read more
Visit website

Follow PolicyCast on Feedspot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR