Eleanor Freund receives Jeanne Guillemin Prize
Awarded by the Center for International Studies, the prize will help support the PhD candidate's dissertation research on Chinese foreign and security policy.
Awarded by the Center for International Studies, the prize will help support the PhD candidate's dissertation research on Chinese foreign and security policy.
Wiebke Denecke, an expert in East Asian literature, wants to add to the international, interdisciplinary study of the humanities at MIT.
Study uses social media to measure how much sentiment has been affected by the Covid-19 crisis, worldwide.
New effort empowers MIT researchers to shape real estate’s future and build responsibly and sustainably.
Senior Sihao Huang uses his background in physics and complex systems to inform his interdisciplinary approach to political science.
MIT experiment finds people will respond to cues from neighbors about activities and risk preferences.
Sihao Huang, William Kuhl, Tingyu Li, Giramnah Peña-Alcántara, Sreya Vangara, and Kelly Wu will pursue graduate studies in global affairs at Tsinghua University in Beijing.
MIT economist’s new research shows U.S. locales hammered by open trade with China have not rebounded, even a decade or more later.
MIT students collaborate with Hong Kong peers to propose fintech solutions during the MIT Entrepreneurship and Fintech Integrator.
From farmers to supply chains, Associate Professor Karen Zheng tackles operations issues from around the globe.
Professor Lily Tsai’s new book explains how “retributive justice,” the high-profile sanctioning of some in society, helps authoritarians solidify public support.
“U.S. competitiveness depends less on defensive measures than on what we do to strengthen our own capacities,” says MIT’s vice president for research.
New research by political science PhD candidate Meicen Sun illuminates the broad economic and political impacts of internet restrictions.
PhD student Limiao Zhang sees surprising connections between the behavior of cars and bubbles.
Study finds public anticorruption campaigns bolster leaders, even when such measures lack tangible results.