On the Newsstand:Equality

Kathy Lee and Taylor Helgren / March 31, 2010 4:17 pm

Can Soccer Save South Africa?

High expectations mask tough realities

Sam Barr / March 17, 2010 8:27 am

The Folly of Perry v. Schwarzenegger

In my latest Harvard Independent column, I argue that the legal challenge to Proposition 8 in a California federal court may end up backfiring if it reaches the Supreme Court, because there almost certainly are not five votes for judicially-imposed gay marriage on the current court. Furthermore, I said, an anti-marriage equality ruling would suck the air out of the ... Read More

Max Novendstern / March 10, 2010 11:34 pm

Rape Is Not Ambiguous

NPR News has an excellent article up this week on the persistence of rape and sexual violence on college campuses. In honor of Women’s Week and “Feminist Coming Out Day” here at Harvard, I thought I’d make a few comments: There’s a common assumption about men who commit sexual assault on a college campus: That they made a one-time, bad ... Read More

Max Novendstern / February 25, 2010 11:28 pm

John Dewey and Modern Economics

The New Republic has reprinted a wonderful Depression-era essay by John Dewey about the collapse of what he calls the “romanticism of business”: But it was just at this point that the new romanticism of business so cleverly came in. Human imagination had never before conceived anything so fantastic as the idea that every individual is actuated in all his desires ... Read More

Neil Patel / February 3, 2010 7:52 pm

Crowdsourcing, Science, and Politics

In a recent email to the university, President Faust invited the Harvard Community to participate in the “Harvard Catalyst & InnoCentive Prize for Innovation.” This experiment in crowdsourcing seeks to bring the Harvard community together to propose new questions and suggest new answers related to Type 1 diabetes. As the website states: “This challenge is an exercise in tapping the ... Read More

Max Novendstern / January 25, 2010 11:35 pm

Money, Politics, and Citizens United

I spent this past week complaining about government dysfunction — so I’d be remiss not to mention the Citizens United ruling. Of the many bad things that happened last week Citizens United is probably the most significant. The ruling will make our government worse. How much worse? It’s not clear — some argue that risk-averse corporations won’t be inclined to ... Read More

Giulio Galliani / December 20, 2009 11:05 pm

Understanding Italy’s Prime Minister

What Silvio Berlusconi represents in Italian politics

Victoria Hargis and John He / December 20, 2009 11:00 pm

Brazil on the World Stage

Can Latin America's largest country rise above the hurdles?

Max Novendstern / November 28, 2009 7:51 am

Wall Street, Rhodes Scholars, and the Soul of the University

Last Saturday the 2010 Rhodes scholars were announced and a full five Harvard students were among them (along with two Yale students and one Princeton student…but, really, who’s counting?) On the same day, Elliot Gerson, the American secretary of the Rhodes Trust, published an op-ed in the Washington Post, pointing out that more and more Rhodes scholars are pursuing careers ... Read More

Peter Bozzo and Katie Zavadski / November 17, 2009 1:50 am

Blind Justice?

The Supreme Court’s decisions last term reveal a trend toward color-blindness Two cases decided by the Supreme Court earlier this year demonstrate an ongoing, if cautious, conservative march towards a new constitutional order with regards to race. In the case of Ricci v. Destefano, a divided Court ruled that it was unconstitutional to throw out the results of a promotion ... Read More

HPR / May 29, 2009 2:52 am

Summer 2009

Urban America Volume 36, Number 2, Summer 2009. Letter from the Editor The Ten-Year Plan IAN MERRIFIELD Daring to end homelessness The Future of Urban Education Tiffany wen and jyoti jasrasaria The impact of new innovation on urban school systems Cities Without Limits Chris danello and ashley fabrizio How long-term factors drive municipal economies A New Approach to a Chronic ... Read More

Max Novendstern / May 24, 2009 3:47 am

Power Play

How inequality can spiral out of control “Let me tell you about the very rich,” F. Scott Fitzgerald once wrote. “They are very different from you and me.” To this, Ernest Hemingway famously replied: “Yes, they have more money.” This exchange occurred in 1926, a time in America that was very good for the very rich, paralleled by today’s socioeconomic ... Read More

Max Novendstern / April 29, 2009 5:37 am

Connecting Liberty and Equality

For an allegedly “grotesque” (but, thankfully, “innocuous”) confusion, Sam Barr’s equation of liberty and equally is pretty well-founded empirically. Think about the history of America. Think about the struggle to integrate non-land-owners, Catholics, Jews, women, blacks and now gays. Surely, as Sam notes, all this expanded both liberty and equality at once. One way to understand the relationship between liberty ... Read More

Sam Barr / April 27, 2009 7:24 pm

Gay Marriage and Neutral Principles

With all this talk about gay marriage, we eventually have to come to the question: Who decides? Who gets to say whether we will have gay marriage or not? And that question eventually becomes, Is it okay for courts to legalize gay marriage if legislatures won’t? Publius over at Obsidian Wings has some interesting thoughts on the matter. He claims ... Read More

Sam Barr / April 27, 2009 3:57 am

“Never On the Planning Committee”

I know that Daniel is only trying to soften his blows, but really, I don’t think my argument can be “innocuous” and “unfortunate” at the same time. Come on, tell me what you really think! I can appreciate how it seems that liberals are always in the business of telling people what rights they do and don’t have. But, in ... Read More

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