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Sep 11, 2012 Sarah Flamm, BA '11, on the Economic Value of Citizenship

Recent Public Policy alumna, Sarah Flamm, co-authored a recent publication for the Migration Policy Institute on "The Economic Value of Citizenship for Immigrants in the United States". She currently works on the International Program and the Labor Markets Initiative as a Research Assistant for MPI.

Jul 20, 2012 Public Policy Director Discusses the Costs the Political Corruption

Bruce Owen, Director of the Public Policy Program and the Morris M. Doyle Professor in Public Policy, spoke on 'The Costs of Political Corruption' at the Hudson Institute on July 18, 2012.  Please visit here to view the video in its entirety.  

Jun 19, 2012 Otis Reid receives 2012 Dinkelspiel Award

Otis Reid, BA in Public Policy and Economics, was a 2012 recipient of The Lloyd W. Dinkelspiel Award. This honor recognizes distinctive and exceptional contributions to undergraduate education or the quality of student life at Stanford. The contribution may be made for such activities as curriculum design, program development, advising excellence, residential education, committee leadership, or extracurricular education.

Jun 06, 2012 David Crane, lecturer in public policy, on 'When You Hate Your Taxes but Can’t Name Your Legislator'.

Who do you think has more influence over the education, safety, health, welfare, transportation, justice, recreation and economic well-being of 40 million Californians? U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein or California State Senator Loni Hancock?

That’s easy: Loni Hancock.

How can it be that someone so powerful is so unknown? The answer is that few people pay attention to the elections that most affect their lives. In California and most states, those elections are to the state legislature.

Continue reading the Op-Ed (opens to Bloomberg.com)

Jun 05, 2012 Anjney Midha, Public Policy '15, named Google Policy Fellow

Two Stanford students, ANDREW BLANCO and ANJNEY MIDHA, have been chosen as 2012 Google Policy Fellows. The program gives undergraduate and graduate students interested in Internet and technology policy the opportunity to work in public interest organizations at the forefront of debates on broadband and access issues, content regulation, copyright and trademark reform, consumer privacy and open government. Fellows work directly with senior staff members of a host organization. Only 15 fellows were selected from among more than 1,300 submissions.

Nov 30, 2011 On Potato Chips and Social Class: Public Policy Alum, Josh Freedman

Josh Freedman, Class of 2011, co-authored an article in the December 6 issue of Gastronomica titled 'Authenticity in America: Class Distinctions in Potato Chip Advertising'. 

The study uses potato chips to analyze class identity in food marketing because "you can't use caviar, you can't use pork rinds, you have to use something everybody eats and that's potato chips," said Dan Jurafsky, a professor of linguistics. 

More on Josh's research project, and its conception, can be read in the November 30th issue of the Stanford Report.

Nov 01, 2011 David Hoffert, M.P.P. degree candidate, is the 2011 Frank Figueroa Memorial Scholarship Recipient

The Frank Figueroa Memorial Scholarship is intended to recognize and support excellence in public service by awarding a stipend to a graduate student pursuing a Masters of Public Administration in California, Arizona, Nevada or Hawaii. David Hoffert, currently in his second year in the M.P.P. degree program, was recently announced as the 2011-12 scholarship recipient. In early November he will travel to Southern California to accept the $2,000 award. Congratulations, David!

 

Oct 31, 2011 Public Policy Alum, Mark Donig, published in Foreign Policy

Mark Donig, Public Policy Class of 2009, recently co-authored an Op-Ed in Foreign Policy.  It discusses the opportunity for increased collaboration between Washington and Jerusalem by using Israel and post-Mubarak Egypt as an example.  Mark was a researcher at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and currently is a research analyst with a consulting firm in Virginia. 

Aug 31, 2011 Catching up hard when pensions are underfunded - Op-Ed by David Crane

Public Policy lecturer David Crane wrote an Op-Ed on July 29, 2011 in the San Francisco Chronicle on the chronic underfunding of pensions. He argues that "pension funding is a moral issue, not unlike climate change. By not making sacrifices today to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, our generation is imposing a larger burden on future generations. Likewise, by not contributing more money to pension funds today, we are forcing people tomorrow to use their money to cover our costs plus interest. In turn, they will have less money with which to compensate their own public employees, fund their colleges, build their infrastructure, finance their environmental protection, maintain their parks and more."

The full article can be read here

May 17, 2011 Nikhil Joshi, MA Public Policy student, on the NFL and NBA strike

Watch this on the SIEPR channel on YouTube.
Public Policy coterminal Master's student, Nikhil Joshi, and former Public Policy Director, Roger Noll, spoke with Channel 7's David Louie about the strike both for the NFL and NBA and what it means to teams and ticket purchasers.