Episoder
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Are jobs requiring high levels of human interaction worth preserving in the age of automation? Can we design machines to achieve something profound – the mutual recognition that occurs when human beings truly "see" each other? CASBS faculty fellow Mitchell Stevens explores these questions with Allison Pugh, author of the 2024 book The Last Human Job: The Work of Connecting in a Disconnected World. Pugh launched work on the book as a 2016-17 CASBS fellow.
ALLISON PUGH
website | Google Scholar page | Interview with Allison Pugh on building a society of connection (CASBS in partnership with Public Books) |
Princeton University Press page for The Last Human Job
MITCHELL STEVENS
Stanford GSE faculty page | Stanford profile | CASBS page | Google Scholar page |
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Santi Furnari (CASBS fellow, 2023-24) engages renowned political sociologist & 2015-16 fellow Elisabeth Clemens on the role of private civic volunteer organizations in co-constructing national identity and state capacity as well as serving as tools of governance, solidarity, and inclusion for much of American history. In what form does civic benevolence and philanthropy operate in the contemporary landscape? This absorbing conversation draws inspiration from the multi-award-winning book "Civic Gifts," much of which Clemens wrote during her CASBS year.
ELISABETH CLEMENS: Univ. of Chicago faculty page | Clemens wins 2023 Gordon J. Laing Award | on Wikipedia |
The book is Civic Gifts: Voluntarism and the Making of the American Nation-State (Univ. of Chicago Press), winner of the Barrington Moore Book Award, Comparative and Historical Sociology section, American Sociological Association; the University of Chicago Press Gordon J. Laing Award; the Outstanding Published Book Award, ASA Section on Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity; and the Peter Dobkin Hall History of Philanthropy Prize, Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action (ARNOVA).
SANTI FURNARI: CASBS page | City University of London, Bayes School of Business faculty page | on Google Scholar |Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Manglende episoder?
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Legendary tech journalist John Markoff (CASBS fellow, 2017-18) chats with 2023-24 CASBS fellow Young Mie Kim on her groundbreaking efforts to identify how shadowy groups use algorithms and targeted disinformation campaigns during presidential election cycles; measure their real-world distorting effects on voter mobilization or suppression; and illuminate our understanding of resulting political inequalities and their implications for American democracy.
YOUNG MIE KIM: CASBS bio | Univ. of Wisconsin faculty page | "The Disinformation Detective" (On Wisconsin magazine) |
Kim leads Project DATA (Digital Ad Tracking & Analysis) at UW. | Project DATA on X |
Kim is lead author of the article "The Stealth Media? Groups and Targets Behind Divisive Issue Campaigns on Facebook," Political Communication, v35 n4 (2018). The article won the Kaid-Sanders Award for the Best Political Communication Article of the Year by the International Communication Association.
Coverage of findings: The New York Times here and here | Wired |
Kim's testimony delivered to the Federal Election Commission |
Kim is a founding member of the International Panel on the Information Environment. Coverage of IPIE in The New York Times |Kim among the authors of "The effects of Facebook and Instagram on the 2020 election: A deactivation experiment," Proceedings of the National Academies of Science, v121 n2 (2024) |
Kim a coauthor of several articles appearing in a special issue of Science on Social Media and Elections (2023) |
At the beginning of the episode, Kim discusses the influence of Phil Converse. Converse was a CASBS fellow in 1979-80 and later served as CASBS director (1989-94). Learn more about Converse's work.
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Read John Markoff's latest book, Whole Earth: The Many Lives of Stewart Brand (Penguin Random House, 2022)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Stefan Link, a 2023-24 CASBS fellow, chats with Barry Eichengreen, a 1996-97 CASBS fellow and world renowned for his expertise at the nexus of international economics and economic history. They discuss some of Eichengreen's most prominent works — including "The European Economy Since 1945," which emerged from his CASBS experience, and "Golden Fetters," his most cited book — interrogating their durability and applicability to contemporary industrial, financial, and monetary policy challenges and governance.
BARRY EICHENGREEN: UC Berkeley faculty page | Homepage & CV | on Wikipedia |STEFAN LINK: CASBS bio | Dartmouth faculty page |
Mentioned in the episode:
Eichengreen's talk on "Steering Structural Change" (session 2) at the Peterson Institute for International Economics (16 April 2024)
Eichengreen & Temin NBER paper on "The Gold Standard and the Great Depression" (June 1997)
Select Eichengreen books
Elusive Stability: Essays in the History of International Finance 1919-1939 (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1990)
Golden Fetters: The Gold Standard and the Great Depression 1919-1939 (Oxford Univ. Press, 1992)
International Monetary Arrangements for the 21st Century (Brookings Institution, 1994)
Globalizing Capital: A History of the International Monetary System (Princeton Univ. Press, 1994)
European Monetary Unification: Theory, Practice, and Analysis (MIT Press, 1997)
Toward a New International Financial Architecture: A Practical Post-Asia Agenda (Peterson Institute for International Economics, 1999)
Financial Crises and What to Do About Them (Oxford Univ. Press, 2002)
Capital Flows and Crises (MIT Press, 2004)
Global Imbalances and the Lessons of Bretton Woods (MIT Press, 2006)
The European Economy Since 1945: Coordinated Capitalism and Beyond (Princeton Univ. Press, 2006)
Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the International Monetary System (Oxford Univ. Press, 2012)
Hall of Mirrors: The Great Depression, the Great Recession, and the Uses — and Misuses — of History (Oxford Univ. Press, 2015)
Stefan Link book
Forging Global Fordism: Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, and the Contest over the Industrial Order (Princeton Univ. Press, 2020)
Winner of the Stuart L. Bernath Book Prize, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, as well as the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize, American Historical Association
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Labor historian & 2023-24 CASBS fellow Gabriel Winant in conversation with 2018-19 CASBS fellow Ruth Milkman, among the nation's most renowned sociologists of labor. In addition to interrogating divisions within and segmentation across labor markets in recent decades, Milkman also has remained attuned to the complexity of the overall working class experience, essential for illuminating ways in which workers can unite and organize.
RUTH MILKMAN: CUNY faculty page | personal website | ASA bio |
Milkman's book Immigrant Labor and the New Precariat (2020) | Polity Press Q&A |
GABRIEL WINANT: CASBS bio | Univ. of Chicago faculty page | faculty Q&A |Winant's book The Next Shift: The Fall of Industry and the Rise of Health Care in Rust Belt America (2022)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Pulitzer Prize-winning tech journalist John Markoff chats with 2022-23 CASBS fellow Nathan Matias about often-overlooked public interest questions and concerns regarding the deployment of tech platform algorithms and AI models. Specifically, Matias is a player in filling the two-way knowledge gaps between civil society and tech firms with an eye on governance, safety, accountability, and advancing the science — including the social science — of human-algorithm behavior.
Nathan Matias: Cornell University faculty page | CASBS bio | Personal website |
Citizens & Technology Lab
Coalition for Independent Technology Research
Select Matias publications
"Humans and Algorithms Work Together — So Study Them Together" Nature (2023)
"Impact Assessment of Human-Algorithm Feedback Loops" Just Tech, SSRC (2022)
"The Tragedy of the Digital Commons" The Atlantic (2015)
"To Hold Tech Accountable, Look to Public Health" Wired (2023)
Link to more Nathan Matias public writing | Matias on Medium | on LinkedIn |
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Read John Markoff's latest book, Whole Earth: The Many Lives of Stewart Brand (Penguin Random House, 2022)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Recorded before a live audience, Margaret Levi, Alison Gopnik, & Anne-Marie Slaughter discuss a CASBS project, "The Social Science of Caregiving," which is reimagining the philosophical, psychological, biological, political, & economic foundations of care and caregiving. The goal is a coherent empirical and theoretical account or synthesis of care that advances understandings and policy discussions. [The episode notes provide links for further exploration.]
Article on CASBS's project on The Social Science of CaregivingWeb page for the project on The Social Science of Caregiving
Related: Human Centered episode #61, "Developing AI Like Raising Kids" (Alison Gopnik & Ted Chiang)Alison Gopnik: CASBS bio | UC Berkeley Bio |
Gopnik article, "Caregiving in Philosophy, Biology & Political Economy" (Dædalus)
Margaret Levi: CASBS bio | CASBS program on Creating a New Moral Political Economy |
Anne-Marie Slaughter: New America bio |
Slaughter articles, "Care is a Relationship" (Dædalus) | "Why Women Still Can't Have it All" (The Atlantic)
Slaughter book, Unfinished Business (Penguin Random House)Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Pulitzer Prize-winning tech journalist & 2017-18 CASBS fellow John Markoff chats with 2022-23 CASBS fellow Rebecca Slayton on how the field of computing expertise evolved, eventually giving rise to the niche of professionals who protect systems from cyber-attacks. Slayton's forthcoming book explores the governance & risk implications emerging from the fact that cybersecurity experts must establish their authority by paradoxically revealing vulnerabilities and insecurities of that which they seek to protect.
REBECCA SLAYTON
Cornell University faculty page | | CASBS page |Slayton's book Arguments that Count: Physics, Computing, and Missile Defense, 1949-2012 (MIT Press)
Slayton's article "What is the Cyber Offense-Defense Balance?," International Security
Video: Talk on "Shadowing Cybersecurity: Expertise, Transnationalism, and the Politics of Uncertainty" at Stanford Univ.
JOHN MARKOFFNew York Times page
Markoff's latest book, Whole Earth: The Many Lives of Steward Brand (Penguin Random House, 2022)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
75 Alta Road | Stanford, CA 94305 |
CASBS: website|Twitter|YouTube|LinkedIn|podcast|latest newsletter|signup|outreachView the Fall 2023 CASBS Newsletter
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Two-time CASBS fellow Fred Turner engages CASBS board of directors chair Abby Smith Rumsey before a live audience to discuss her new book "Memory, Edited: Taking Liberties with History." When the erasure or distortion of collective memory through storytelling hijacks fact, truth, and history itself, what kind of information infrastructures can effectively confront those false narratives? Turner and Rumsey explore the tensions between history and storytelling and resulting implications for political beliefs, actions, and our collective sense of reality.
ABBY SMITH RUMSEY
CASBS website bio | Personal website | Talk at Long Now Foundation in partnership with CASBSMIT Press web page for Memory, Edited: Taking Liberties with History
CASBS Q&A with Rumsey (2022)
FRED TURNERStanford University profile | Fred Turner's books | on Google Scholar |
"Machine Politics: The Rise of the Internet and a New Age of Authoritarianism," Harper's Magazine (2019)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Renowned sociologist Michèle Lamont (CASBS fellow, 2002-03) discusses her new book, Seeing Others, with former CASBS director Woody Powell. The book assembles decades of Lamont’s scholarship, engaging some of contemporary society’s most elemental challenges and advancing key building blocks toward a shared human experience marked by greater inclusion, belonging, dignity, empathy, and equality.
MICHÈLE LAMONT:Harvard University faculty page | Harvard sociology page
Personal website | Simon & Schuster page for Seeing Others
The Successful Societies project, which held its first convening at CASBS in 2003
WALTER "WOODY" POWELL
Stanford University faculty page | CASBS page
Personal website | PACS pageAnnouncement of Powell as CASBS director
CASBS summer institute on Organizations and Their Effectiveness (2016-present)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Fully understanding and regulating our complex information ecosystems will require creating new cultures and modes of collaborating, new organizational frameworks and, yes, working with generative AI models in service of aggregating actionable scientific knowledge. Angela Aristidou (CASBS fellow, 2022-23) navigates the crucial questions and challenges with Phil Howard (CASBS fellow, 2008-09), a renowned scholar of tech innovation and public policy as well as co-founder and chair of the new International Panel on the Information Environment (IPIE).
PHIL HOWARD:
University of Oxford page | Wikipedia page | Personal website |
INTERNATIONAL PANEL ON THE INFORMATION ENVIRONMENT:
Website | Oxford article on IPIE | New York Times article on IPIE |
ANGELA ARISTIDOU
UCL School of Management page | CASBS page | UCL article on AA | on ResearchGate |
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences(CASBS)at Stanford University
75 Alta Road | Stanford, CA 94305 |
CASBS: website|Twitter|YouTube|LinkedIn|podcast|latest newsletter|signup|outreachFollow the CASBS webcast series,Social Science for a World in Crisis
NOV. 16, 2023 Event: 2023 Sage-CASBS Award Lecture | Elizabeth Anderson & Alondra Nelson
Meet the 2023-24 CASBS class
Announcing a new fellowship partnership
CASBS Program Curates Issue of Dædalus
Previous podcast episode: The Memory Science Disruptor
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Dan Simon, a 2022-23 CASBS fellow and USC law professor, joins in conversation with Elizabeth Loftus, a 1978-79 CASBS fellow and Distinguished Professor at UC Irvine. Loftus is known in the public sphere through her decades-long study of memory – specifically, its malleability and fallibility – as well as her application of findings as an expert witness or consultant in hundreds of legal cases. Loftus's book "Eyewitness Testimony," completed at the Center, charted the course of her career that followed and serves as this episode's launching point.
ELIZABETH LOFTUS
UC Irvine faculty page
Wikipedia page
TED Talk (2013), "How reliable is your memory?"
Nobel Prize Summit (2023), "The misinformation effect"
The New Yorker (2021), "How Elizabeth Loftus Changed the Meaning of Memory"
DAN SIMON
USC Gould School of Law faculty page
CASBS bio
"In Doubt: The Psychology of the Criminal Justice Process" (Harvard Univ. Press, 2012)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences(CASBS)at Stanford University
CASBS: website|Twitter|YouTube|LinkedIn|podcast|latest newsletter|signup|outreach
Follow the CASBS webcast series, Social Science for a World in Crisis
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
While you're listening to this episode, 2016-17 CASBS fellow Jonathan Jansen likely will write another few thousand words. As a scholar of education & leader of education institutions, Jansen is South Africa's most towering figure. To call him prolific is a gross understatement. He writes a steady stream of books & more books. As a public intellectual he writes a separate steady stream of columns & essays. And he's written a family memoir too. We bring 2022-23 CASBS fellow Zimitri Erasmus, a social anthropologist who is working on a book on writing praxis, in conversation with Jansen to unlock some secrets & insights into his most powerful & liberating weapon for engaging the world – writing.
JONATHAN JANSEN
on Google Scholar
Jansen website
Mentioned in the episode
Corrupted: A Study of Chronic Dysfunction in South African Universities (2023)
Song for Sarah: Lessons from my Mother (2017)
Jansen and CASBS
"Loving and Blacking" (symposium, 2017)
"Higher Ed at the Crossroads" (webcast, 2020)ZIMITRI ERASMUS
CASBS page
on Google Scholar
at University of Witswatersrand
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences(CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
What are the most effective collective actions that social protest movements can or should undertake in the context of deep societal conflict and polarization? CASBS fellows Eran Halperin (2022-23) & Robb Willer (2012-13, 2020-21) compare their cross-national research findings and explore Halperin's real-time applied work with the dramatic, ongoing protests in Israel.
ERAN HALPERIN links:
Psychology of Intergroup Conflict and Reconciliation Lab (PCIL)Halperin on Google Scholar
aChord: Social Psychology for Social Change
ROBB WILLER links:Willer's Stanford faculty page
Willer's personal web page
Polarization and Social Change Lab
Willer on Google Scholar
Article in JPSP, "The Activist's Dilemma" (2020)
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
CASBS:website|Twitter|YouTube|LinkedIn|podcast|latest newsletter|signup|outreach
Follow the CASBS webcast series,Social Science for a World in Crisis
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
Drawing upon a career of scholarship extending from studies of labor, citizenship, and the state in Africa to explorations of global empire, colonialism, and globalization, three-time CASBS fellow Frederick Cooper – in conversation with 2022-23 fellows Jean Beaman and Martin Williams – gives a master class on how critical and relational thinking serve historical inquiries that advance our understandings.
Frederick Cooper, CASBS fellow 1990-91, 1995-96, 2002-03
NYU faculty page
Wikipedia page
Fred Cooper books
Citizenship, Inequality, and Difference: Historical Perspectives (2018)
Citizenship Between Empire and Nation: Remaking France and French Africa, 1945-1960 (2014)
Empires in World History: Power and the Politics of Difference (2010)
Cooper Books in CASBS's Ralph W. Tyler Collection:
Colonialism in Question: Theory, Knowledge, History (2005)Decolonization and African Society: The Labor Question in French and British Africa (1996)
Confronting Historical Paradigms: Peasants, Labor, and the Capitalist World System in Africa and Latin America (1993)
Fred Cooper article referenced in the episode
"What is the Concept of Globalization Good for? An African Historian's Perspective" (2001)Jean Beaman faculty page
Martin Williams faculty page
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
Producer: Mike Gaetani | Engineer & co-producer: Joe Monzel | -
This episode is produced in association with the CASBS project "The Social Science of Caregiving," and draws further inspiration from the CASBS project "Imagining Adaptive Societies." Learn more about both:
https://casbs.stanford.edu/programs/projects/social-science-caregiving
https://casbs.stanford.edu/programs/projects/imagining-adaptive-societies
CASBS program director Zachary Ugolnik served as co-producer of this episode.
Ted Chiang on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Chiang
Ted Chiang in The New Yorker
"Why Computers Won't Make Themselves Smarter" https://www.newyorker.com/culture/annals-of-inquiry/why-computers-wont-make-themselves-smarter
"ChatGPT is a Blurry JPEG of the Web" https://www.newyorker.com/tech/annals-of-technology/chatgpt-is-a-blurry-jpeg-of-the-web
"Will A.I. Become the New McKinsey?" https://www.newyorker.com/science/annals-of-artificial-intelligence/will-ai-become-the-new-mckinsey
"Ted Chiang's Soulful Science Fiction" https://www.newyorker.com/culture/persons-of-interest/ted-chiangs-soulful-science-fictionExplore the work of Alison Gopnik
http://alisongopnik.com/
http://www.gopniklab.berkeley.edu/alison
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alison_Gopnik
https://www.ted.com/talks/alison_gopnik_what_do_babies_think
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/16/podcasts/ezra-klein-podcast-alison-gopnik-transcript.html
Learn about CASBS
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Human Centered
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This is a podcast version of a live CASBS webcast event. View video of the event here.
The event was produced in association with CASBS's program on Creating a New Moral Political Economy. Learn about the program here.
CASBS's moral political economy program guest-curated the Winter 2023 issue of Dædalus, a publication of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. The entire issue is open access here. Panelist John Ahlquist's essay in the issue provided impetus for the organization of the event this podcast episode draws from.
CASBS: website|Twitter|YouTube|LinkedIn|podcast|latest newsletter|signup|outreachFollow the CASBS webcast series,Social Science for a World in Crisis
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
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Glenn Loury on Google Scholar
Coate & Loury (1993), "Will Affirmative-Action Policies Eliminate Negative Stereotypes?"
Loury, The Anatomy of Racial Inequality (The Du Bois Lectures)
The Tanner Lectures at Stanford (2007) Lecture 1 | Lecture 2
Loury (2008), Race, Incarceration, and American Values
Loury (2019), "Why Does Racial Inequality Persist?"
Somanathan and Allen, eds. (2020) Difference without Domination: Pursuing Justice in Diverse Democracies
Loury public symposium at CASBS (2016), "Racial Inequality in 21st Century America" (video)
CASBS webcast (2020), "The Persistence of Racial Inequality" (video); panel featuring Glenn Loury, Joshua Cohen, Francis Fukuyama, Alondra Nelso, & Margaret Levi
The Glenn Show (YouTube)
The Glenn Show (Manhattan Institute)
CASBS: website|Twitter|YouTube|LinkedIn|podcast|latest newsletter|signup|outreach
Follow the CASBS webcast series,Social Science for a World in Crisis
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
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Robert Keohane bios: CASBS | Princeton | Wikipedia
Comparative Politics of Climate Change Policy workshops at CASBSComplex interdependence
After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy
2016 Balzan Prize | prize speech
Designing Social Inquiry: Scientific Inference in Qualitative Research
Johan Skytte Prize
Keohane & Ostrom, Local Commons and Global Interdependence
CASBS: website | Twitter | YouTube | LinkedIn | podcast | latest newsletter | signup | outreach
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Human Centered
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Emerging Trends in The Social and Behavioral Sciences
Bob’s Introduction to the project
About the Robert A. Scott Lectureship Fund
The classic mud volleyball photo (click then scroll to the bottom of the article)
Human Centered episode featuring Richard Wrangham
CASBS in the History of Behavioral EconomicsCASBS
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University
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Human Centered
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