Money not cure-all for health care
Since money and health care are inextricably linked, reforms in the United States have tried to curb runaway medical inflation, while initiatives internationally have worked to provide funds that...
View ArticleSpouting off
If you ever wondered why your mother poured Sunday morning’s bacon grease into an empty can, it’s because mother really knew best: She was trying to prevent a human-made disaster in the sewers. Each...
View ArticleTurning on the lights
Despite the economic strides that many of its nations have made in recent years, Africa is still, in a literal sense, a dark continent. No country there represents this more clearly than Liberia, where...
View ArticleHigh-tech tools for change
When the electric light was invented, education reformers thought the school day would be transformed. After all, that new technology offered the possibility to educate students at any time of the day...
View ArticlePondering health, at home and abroad
The world is in the midst of a health care transition in which the primary threat increasingly comes from chronic diseases rather than infectious ones, and where the ailments of the elderly are...
View ArticleMoney not cure-all for health care
Since money and health care are inextricably linked, reforms in the United States have tried to curb runaway medical inflation, while initiatives internationally have worked to provide funds that...
View ArticleSpouting off
If you ever wondered why your mother poured Sunday morning’s bacon grease into an empty can, it’s because mother really knew best: She was trying to prevent a human-made disaster in the sewers. Each...
View ArticleTurning on the lights
Despite the economic strides that many of its nations have made in recent years, Africa is still, in a literal sense, a dark continent. No country there represents this more clearly than Liberia,...
View ArticleHigh-tech tools for change
When the electric light was invented, education reformers thought the school day would be transformed. After all, that new technology offered the possibility to educate students at any time of the day...
View ArticlePondering health, at home and abroad
The world is in the midst of a health care transition in which the primary threat increasingly comes from chronic diseases rather than infectious ones, and where the ailments of the elderly are...
View ArticleThe quantum of cruelty
Five years after the review was ordered, the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee voted earlier this month to release the executive summary from a 6,300-page report that details for the first time the...
View ArticleA mirror to coercion
Completing an inquiry that began in 2009, on Tuesday the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence released a long-awaited executive summary of its still-classified report on the broad use of...
View ArticleShifting careers to drive change
Last year, Winifred White Neisser was thinking about a career change when the longtime television executive heard about a Harvard program that could help her chart a new path. Neisser enrolled in the...
View ArticleThe career afterlife
Some people dream of endless golf games when their career comes to a close, but the Harvard Advanced Leadership Initiative (ALI) has a different vision. Instead of considering retirement an end point,...
View ArticleThe career afterlife
Some people dream of endless golf games when their career comes to a close, but the Harvard Advanced Leadership Initiative (ALI) has a different vision. Instead of considering retirement an end point,...
View ArticleLeadership program lets top execs take it to the streets
Leadership isn’t limited — and after conquering their own domains, today’s innovators want to share. Those are the motivating ideas behind the Advanced Leadership Initiative (ALI), a new “third stage”...
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