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Jan 27, 2019
01/19
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foreign-policy and social science. so much so that i think it is fair to refer to it as a social scientist's war. government and military officials were so impressed with the contributions intellectuals made during the war that they became concerned the cessation of hostilities would lead them to lose the bring power that migrated to washington. officers in the then officers n army-air forces with the douglas corporation founded the rand corporation which is short for research and development and was intended to bring intellectual'' research to policymakers' attention. in 1947, rand's leaders held a conference to recruit. they invited the nation's most prominent social scientists. you can see other examples of people invited to the conference on the screen. during the conference, rand's leaders were impressed with speier's ability to bring theoretical concerns to bear on practical problems. they asked him to become the founding head of the social science division. .peier accepted many, including speier, were no longer s
foreign-policy and social science. so much so that i think it is fair to refer to it as a social scientist's war. government and military officials were so impressed with the contributions intellectuals made during the war that they became concerned the cessation of hostilities would lead them to lose the bring power that migrated to washington. officers in the then officers n army-air forces with the douglas corporation founded the rand corporation which is short for research and development...
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Jan 1, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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i was also mentioning both parties are social science projects and theoretical projects. say a little bit about what you're working on next, your next project. >> my next project is to stay back and die. no, just kidding. so there are a couple things. one is that i'm writing this book about the 1919 race riot in chicago. it's a book of poetry called "1919." so i'm working on that. and it kind of emerged from "ghost ins ts in the schoolyard" i did a lot of research about that period in order to write one of the chapters and i became increasingly fascinated with that period. we are coming up on the centennial of this race riot and it's something a lot of people don't really know about. lot of people don't know about the red summer. so part of it is a teaching tool and i'm working with -- i'm a scholarly adviser with the newbury library to think how to educate people in chicago about this race riot that happened that many of us believe kind of set the pattern for the city as we understand it today. i'm working on that. working on "iron heart." yay, thank you. it's a comic bo
i was also mentioning both parties are social science projects and theoretical projects. say a little bit about what you're working on next, your next project. >> my next project is to stay back and die. no, just kidding. so there are a couple things. one is that i'm writing this book about the 1919 race riot in chicago. it's a book of poetry called "1919." so i'm working on that. and it kind of emerged from "ghost ins ts in the schoolyard" i did a lot of research...
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Jan 22, 2019
01/19
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BBCNEWS
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a study conducted by thejournal of social sciences found that a large proportion of celebrities, sportsall born between january 20 and february 18 which makes them share the star sign aquarius. so let's begin with alexandra kellert. what is your star sign? i am aquarius. well, you're going to be rich and famous. you are already. all the papers carrying the brexit latest. it seems that loss has changed but not much has changed. theresa may came to parliament again to present a plan b that a plan b looks an awful lot like a plan a senna mps both on her side of the house and the opposition labor party are looking at ways to break the deadlock and see how they can move forward. there are two facets to this, the risk that the ministers we re to this, the risk that the ministers were threatening to quit over brexit, a0 members of the government say they will resign if tory mps are banned from voting for a plan to stop the nodal brexit. there is a risk of this difficult situation in the tory party but also the brexit strategy. we are leaving on march 29. interestingly, the way theresa may spok
a study conducted by thejournal of social sciences found that a large proportion of celebrities, sportsall born between january 20 and february 18 which makes them share the star sign aquarius. so let's begin with alexandra kellert. what is your star sign? i am aquarius. well, you're going to be rich and famous. you are already. all the papers carrying the brexit latest. it seems that loss has changed but not much has changed. theresa may came to parliament again to present a plan b that a plan...
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so i don't want to scholarship to study social sciences in berlin but kept on returning to last boss to help others. i believe something just before so i forward a place that i learned and i wanted to be on the ground again following sars arrest her college classmates campaigned for her release organizing protests in berlin boston athens and other cities her defense team is calling for greater protection for humanitarian workers but you're not going to do these you know we're going to go overseas right now because they recognize that a hospital is the good if you will for financial benefits. of the gulf war he. required in order to do you know to stop the use of the crime wolf might become smart because you cannot cover the smugglers without benefits and these izzo because you have to exclude them from some shows and organization of the provides for money. until such safeguards are in place greek authorities can claim that such i was helping migrants enter the country illegally she's currently waiting for her case to go to trial she hopes it won't go that far but is determined to pro
so i don't want to scholarship to study social sciences in berlin but kept on returning to last boss to help others. i believe something just before so i forward a place that i learned and i wanted to be on the ground again following sars arrest her college classmates campaigned for her release organizing protests in berlin boston athens and other cities her defense team is calling for greater protection for humanitarian workers but you're not going to do these you know we're going to go...
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Jan 12, 2019
01/19
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there was a lot of funding for big social science experiments at yale and places like that. and then in the early '70s as cold war spending tapered off and began to shift more from spending research funds at universities to using think tanks, the government -- you know, now that there was less money to spend on all this stuff, the government got more clever, and they decided, hey, wait a minute if, why aren't we funding research at really underfunded schools, schools that really need this money and that basically do what we ask them to? and so that's what they started doing. >> yeah. >> and so as the cold war continued to dwindle and as the funding really started to dry up, what you had was this situation where all these public research institutions all over the country have built up big staffs and big projects and sort of a legacy of work in specific fields. and all of a sudden they were in danger of having to shut it down. and so what they did instead was looked, well, exactly what drive fromeyer would do later, they looked for outside money, and they went to corporations.
there was a lot of funding for big social science experiments at yale and places like that. and then in the early '70s as cold war spending tapered off and began to shift more from spending research funds at universities to using think tanks, the government -- you know, now that there was less money to spend on all this stuff, the government got more clever, and they decided, hey, wait a minute if, why aren't we funding research at really underfunded schools, schools that really need this money...
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Jan 5, 2019
01/19
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BBCNEWS
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of what this poaching conflict means for conservation in these areas, both in ecological and social sciencety building, and building the skills of rangers is a great thing. i'm quite sceptical of the use of the military in training rangers, especially the use of a foreign military that doesn't necessarily know the context in which they're operating and that is not trained in conservation. at the beginning, you don't really know what to expect, like, i've never seen a rhino up close before. it's strange to see how big they are, and how fast they can move towards you as well. it's quite, yeah...it‘s quite frightening to start off with. where we're doing the rhino tracking, it's normally pretty dense and the grass is quite high, which is a problem. if you start breaking twigs and making noise, they'll come towards you. and obviously you only want them to come towards you on your terms. animal calls the rhino didn't charge this time, so it's safe to come down. crucially, though, they got their pic. the relationships great with the rangers. they're the experts out here in the bush, they know eve
of what this poaching conflict means for conservation in these areas, both in ecological and social sciencety building, and building the skills of rangers is a great thing. i'm quite sceptical of the use of the military in training rangers, especially the use of a foreign military that doesn't necessarily know the context in which they're operating and that is not trained in conservation. at the beginning, you don't really know what to expect, like, i've never seen a rhino up close before. it's...
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so i don't want to scholarship to study social sciences in berlin but kept on returning to last us to help others. i believe when you feel something just go for it so i fear the place that i learned and i wanted to be on this chronicle following stars arrest her college classmates campaigned for her release organizing protests in berlin boston athens and other cities her defense team is calling for greater protection for humanitarian workers but you're not going to do these are not going to go overseas right now because they recognize that a hospital because of the good if you will for a primetime show better for us and they're probably got to be a. requirement in order to do you know if that was stopped because the crime was my gun smuggling you cannot have smugglers without benefits and this is all because you have to exclude from some shows. and organization of the provides for one of them. until such safeguards are in place greek authorities can claim that such i was helping migrants enter the country illegally she's currently waiting for her case to go to trial she hopes it won't
so i don't want to scholarship to study social sciences in berlin but kept on returning to last us to help others. i believe when you feel something just go for it so i fear the place that i learned and i wanted to be on this chronicle following stars arrest her college classmates campaigned for her release organizing protests in berlin boston athens and other cities her defense team is calling for greater protection for humanitarian workers but you're not going to do these are not going to go...
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site i want to scholarship to study social sciences in berlin but kept on returning to last us to help others. i believe when you feel something just go for it so i filled a place that i learned and i wanted to be on this chronicle following stars arrest her college classmates campaign for her release organizing protests in berlin boston athens and other cities her defense team is calling for greater protection for humanitarian workers you're going to do this you know going overseas right now because they recognize that a hospital could if you will for financial benefit. you got what he. required in order to do in order to establish the my gun smuggling you cannot have smugglers without benefits and this is obviously you have to exclude from some shows. and organization of law provides you want to have. until such safeguards are in place greek authorities can claim that site i was helping migrants enter the country illegally she's currently waiting for her. a case to go to trial she hopes it won't go that far but is determined to prove her innocence and that saving lives is not a crime
site i want to scholarship to study social sciences in berlin but kept on returning to last us to help others. i believe when you feel something just go for it so i filled a place that i learned and i wanted to be on this chronicle following stars arrest her college classmates campaign for her release organizing protests in berlin boston athens and other cities her defense team is calling for greater protection for humanitarian workers you're going to do this you know going overseas right now...
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so i want to scholarship to study social sciences in berlin but kept on returning to last us to help others. i believe when you feel something just go for so i filled a place that i learned and i wanted to be on this chronicle following stars arrest her college classmates campaign for her release organizing protests in berlin boston athens and other cities her defense team is calling for greater protection for humanitarian workers are you going to do this you know we're going to go overseas right now because they recognize that. has to recognize the good if you will for financial benefit. we've got for the. required in order to do you know the established the crime of my gun smuggling you cannot have smugglers without benefits and this is obviously you have to exclude from sanctuary. and organization of law provides for one. until such safeguards are in place greek authorities can claim that site i was helping my kids enter the country illegally she's currently waiting for her case to go to trial she hopes it won't go that far but is determined to prove her innocence and that saving
so i want to scholarship to study social sciences in berlin but kept on returning to last us to help others. i believe when you feel something just go for so i filled a place that i learned and i wanted to be on this chronicle following stars arrest her college classmates campaign for her release organizing protests in berlin boston athens and other cities her defense team is calling for greater protection for humanitarian workers are you going to do this you know we're going to go overseas...
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the federal government or the states establishing what you have to have for credit hours in in social sciences you have to have four credit hours in english and three in math etc so there are electives around that and even if this is a core course again i'm not afraid that kids are going to get bible instruction or qur'an instruction in high school and suddenly be. turned into terrible people as i think this. the other side of this debate is arguing. if i can put that question out to kevin i mean the bible is a religious text obviously but people are saying miss those focus on the historical aspects as opposed to actually trying to convert people get them to go to church etc convert them into religion they don't want to say can was such a big deal if they were entirely voluntary. well i think if they are voluntary and it's part of a curriculum and we're actually looking at sort of the critique and historical documentation of the bible or any other religious document then yes i think that probably and i'm not a lawyer i'm not a politician that probably would be then permissible under the consti
the federal government or the states establishing what you have to have for credit hours in in social sciences you have to have four credit hours in english and three in math etc so there are electives around that and even if this is a core course again i'm not afraid that kids are going to get bible instruction or qur'an instruction in high school and suddenly be. turned into terrible people as i think this. the other side of this debate is arguing. if i can put that question out to kevin i...
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Jan 18, 2019
01/19
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ALJAZ
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and that's the irony of describing the saudi crown prince as a reformer you know gets on the social science trying to you know rein in the religious police but on the on the political side he has zero tolerance for dissent and indeed it what we've seen is that either even women who flee the country and you know by walking with their feet are implicitly criticizing the saudi crown prince he goes after them so this is a big backwards year for domestic governments in saudi arabia and that's not even counting the many yemeni civilians who died to the saudi led coalition military efforts in yemen. rish farm is a series of me has been holding talks with wyvil party leaders trying to find a way forward on break said she's reaching out after narrowly surviving a no confidence vote by the crushing defeat of her e.u. withdrawal deal the prime minister has until monday to present her plan b. to parliament if she fails to get it approved then britain faces a real prospect of breaking away from the e.u. on march twenty ninth without a deal and to avoid this a british government could propose to negotiat
and that's the irony of describing the saudi crown prince as a reformer you know gets on the social science trying to you know rein in the religious police but on the on the political side he has zero tolerance for dissent and indeed it what we've seen is that either even women who flee the country and you know by walking with their feet are implicitly criticizing the saudi crown prince he goes after them so this is a big backwards year for domestic governments in saudi arabia and that's not...
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Jan 6, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN3
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i worry about the arts and humanities and social sciences shoved into the second or third row. ken: i couldn't agree more. i am a steam guy, the arts in their broadly and so many other -- in there broadly with so many other things. we are so didacticly preoccupied. we are engaged in constantly pointing out where you are. i suppose by contrast where i might be. red state, blue state, young, old, black or white, male or female, rich or poor, from north or south, east or west, and we forget to select for most of what we are that we share in common. in this rushed specialism to categorize and differentiate, discriminate in the worst sense of the word, we have isolated ourselves. we need the arts and humanities and history and ethics and civics and political science and philosophy more than ever because they become the glue that rebind us back together as a people. when the stem aspects are just what they are, we neglect to select for something that includes all of us. we become over specialized which is a great danger. we can't speak to each other, exacerbated by the divisions. i a
i worry about the arts and humanities and social sciences shoved into the second or third row. ken: i couldn't agree more. i am a steam guy, the arts in their broadly and so many other -- in there broadly with so many other things. we are so didacticly preoccupied. we are engaged in constantly pointing out where you are. i suppose by contrast where i might be. red state, blue state, young, old, black or white, male or female, rich or poor, from north or south, east or west, and we forget to...
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scholarship fund, because we have a lot of work to get more minorities in the humanities and social sciencesreally love to get other people the opportunities that i've had, because i've been really, really lucky. >> i like that. giving back. [cheers and applause] well, 10,000, nice. doubling it, better. >> sure. >> this is for 20. >> okay. >> here it is. [dramatic musical flourish] ♪ edmond hoyle, william strunk, john douglas, and ellen fein are all famously associated with what? >> i've read books by two of these authors, and they are for cards and for writing-- they're rule books. b, final answer. >> that's 20 grand right there. >> yes! >> wow. feeling good now? >> yeah. >> we're two away from 50. 30,000 comes first. here it is. >> okay. [dramatic musical flourish] ♪ >> popular in europe, a thalassotherapy session typically involves sitting in a tub of what? >> now, i've got an idea. >> okay. >> i can't positively eliminate things, though. maybe--i mean, i'm kind of sitting on one to kick out. >> all right. 50/50 and the audience available. risking $15,000 right now with an incorrect answe
scholarship fund, because we have a lot of work to get more minorities in the humanities and social sciencesreally love to get other people the opportunities that i've had, because i've been really, really lucky. >> i like that. giving back. [cheers and applause] well, 10,000, nice. doubling it, better. >> sure. >> this is for 20. >> okay. >> here it is. [dramatic musical flourish] ♪ edmond hoyle, william strunk, john douglas, and ellen fein are all famously...
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Jan 18, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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found out in how they organize knowledge about the rest of the world, the world outside the us, social sciences systematically discourage graduate students from engaging in empirical research overseas, and the best way to secure a tenured track position is by working on -- there are lots of reasons. sociologists do that because they feel the tenure-track positions are secured through working on domestic issues, political scientists had other reasons and the economists working globally with universal models essentially. across the board, there was not deep contextual specialized knowledge the way when tom was trained and i was trained, there was a lot more resource, a lot more resources, funding going into graduate support for training overseas, those things were drying up. and discouraging students from doing it. the best way to get a job is a domestic issue. we were surprised, but the interviews were very clear. >> that is interesting because it raises the question, are universities paying lip service to globalization but actually not really -- >> one thing you find is tension between speciali
found out in how they organize knowledge about the rest of the world, the world outside the us, social sciences systematically discourage graduate students from engaging in empirical research overseas, and the best way to secure a tenured track position is by working on -- there are lots of reasons. sociologists do that because they feel the tenure-track positions are secured through working on domestic issues, political scientists had other reasons and the economists working globally with...
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Jan 27, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN3
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i knew i was going to have to learn the statistical package for the social sciences to do that. i stopped my research for six months to develop a codebook and programself to write to achieve the results i wanted. i recruited graduate students to code and supervise undergrads. two years ago, the daughter of ede of those students who cod was in one of my classes. her father, who i met when she graduated from cornell at the end of the year, came up to me and said he had kept the fact that he was one of my coders on his cv for a long time. lawyer.w a together, the students and i coded more than 6000 cases, which gave me a solid quantitative base for my analysis even though i relied on it primarily only in one chapter and two articles based specifically on the maryland research from one of which was published on defamation. if you want to know consults in the 17th century, look at that article. intended when i first undertook the research that the book would cover the entire period from the beginning of settlement to 1750. it did not take me long to realize i could not cover that ent
i knew i was going to have to learn the statistical package for the social sciences to do that. i stopped my research for six months to develop a codebook and programself to write to achieve the results i wanted. i recruited graduate students to code and supervise undergrads. two years ago, the daughter of ede of those students who cod was in one of my classes. her father, who i met when she graduated from cornell at the end of the year, came up to me and said he had kept the fact that he was...
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Jan 14, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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it's a key predictor in the social science literature and children have better outcomes and families at least one parent is working and even more strikingly from the word looking at the overall characteristics in the regions just being in a community where people are working turns out to be important to the children in the community so for the families and the communities themselves communities in which people are working and contributing to the economic vibrancy everything from housing stock to public goods and engagement in social activities and a love communities it's what gets everybody out of the house and to a place they are interacting with other people every day. one question that comes up a lot you look at all of the men who held the labor force they ask why aren't they taking care of kids with relatives or in scho school. many are sleeping or watching tv. that's what people are doing when they are not working which is conducive to community and there is an economic implication that while it is fashionable to pretend we just have this nostalgic attachment to manufacturing it
it's a key predictor in the social science literature and children have better outcomes and families at least one parent is working and even more strikingly from the word looking at the overall characteristics in the regions just being in a community where people are working turns out to be important to the children in the community so for the families and the communities themselves communities in which people are working and contributing to the economic vibrancy everything from housing stock...
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Jan 20, 2019
01/19
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CNNW
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one things -- lots of social science research has shown is that emotional rhetoric works better thanow should democrats -- what is the emotional -- what is the way democrats -- i mean, i think democrats answer often by having a 20-point program that was approved by -- >> i know. >> -- brookings institute, which is sensible but it's not going to move people. >> no, it's not, but barack obama was able to move people and john f. kennedy was and bill clinton was. you can do it. you can make people understand that, you know, that there's more that unites us than divides us. we have nothing to fear but fear itself. you can swat away the ridiculousness of some of the things we've been told to be scared of and paint a picture of a tomorrow that's better than yesterday. honestly, it's good speechwriters is what you need. >> when you listen to democrats, do you feel they're speaking the way they should? do you want to go in and write speeches for some of them? >> well, they're better speechwriters than me, but when you say democrat, it depends. >> tell us who you like. >> i'm not sure i want t
one things -- lots of social science research has shown is that emotional rhetoric works better thanow should democrats -- what is the emotional -- what is the way democrats -- i mean, i think democrats answer often by having a 20-point program that was approved by -- >> i know. >> -- brookings institute, which is sensible but it's not going to move people. >> no, it's not, but barack obama was able to move people and john f. kennedy was and bill clinton was. you can do it....
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Jan 27, 2019
01/19
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education areas such as business, social work, teacher education, in the humanities as well as in the social sciencesroduce women to be leaders in the variety of different fields >> now, jazz and josey, i have only a minute left what do you want people want -- tell people what you want them to do. >> we want you to donate we want you to - >> yeah. >> we want you to donate we have a good what four or five days left until the 1st. we have under 1.5 to raise i think that we can make it. but we just -- we have to get on it we can get on it now go to the website, what is the website, dr. dawkins >> www.bennett.edu, stand with bennett that's the t-shirts we have on today. stand with bennett. >> and use social media to spread the word and spread the importance of this and why the education -- the continuing education of black women is so important and crucial to our society. use the #stand with bennett. >> here we are. >> it's time to come together. thank you, dr. dawkins and always good to see both of the smilettes on television again. see you in the trenches. >> that's right. >>> up next, my final thought
education areas such as business, social work, teacher education, in the humanities as well as in the social sciencesroduce women to be leaders in the variety of different fields >> now, jazz and josey, i have only a minute left what do you want people want -- tell people what you want them to do. >> we want you to donate we want you to - >> yeah. >> we want you to donate we have a good what four or five days left until the 1st. we have under 1.5 to raise i think that we...
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Jan 21, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN
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her contributions to social science in the progressive era, in the 1920's, were very incredible.art: what was the hardest of this book? were you ever stymied? patricia: a lot. the hardest part was structuring , you are talking about a trial from 1894 you have to get the back story from all of the characters and i really wanted to talk about maria halpern and cleveland. itit was hard to structure in a way that kept the narrative all of thew but got pieces of the story in. brian: you mentioned the breckenridge archives. what was the most valuable thing that you found in the process? patricia: the newspapers. they gave an incredibly rich amount of information. brian: what is next for you? patricia: i would love to find another great scandal to write about. i am looking around, hoping to stumble upon a great story. brian: how do they determine at whether or not this is a successful book? patricia: you will have to ask them. it has not been out long. i guess what determines that can be different. sales, reviews. this was my second book. my first book was called "good catholics," and w
her contributions to social science in the progressive era, in the 1920's, were very incredible.art: what was the hardest of this book? were you ever stymied? patricia: a lot. the hardest part was structuring , you are talking about a trial from 1894 you have to get the back story from all of the characters and i really wanted to talk about maria halpern and cleveland. itit was hard to structure in a way that kept the narrative all of thew but got pieces of the story in. brian: you mentioned...
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Jan 6, 2019
01/19
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CNNW
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this is one of the great findings of the social sciences over the last 20 years, that diverse groupsisions, more original decisions collectively. and that diversity can be measured in terms of age and ethnicity, gender, but also intellectual diversity, people coming from different perspectives, different fields of expertise. i think that's one of the reasons we try to celebrate diversity in terms of social tolerance, in terms of equality of opportunity, but we should also remind ourselves that when we have diverse leaders, for instance, when congress gets more diverse as it is happening right now, we can expect that group to actually make better decisions. that group will be collectively smarter. >> as long as it functions as a group. >> right. figure out a way to communicate, share ideas and collaborate with people who have different perspectives, that's clearly going to be crucial. >> stephen, obviously a good decision to have you on the show. thank you very much. >> thank you. >>> next on gps, we want you to take everything you just learned from stephen johnson and make some of yo
this is one of the great findings of the social sciences over the last 20 years, that diverse groupsisions, more original decisions collectively. and that diversity can be measured in terms of age and ethnicity, gender, but also intellectual diversity, people coming from different perspectives, different fields of expertise. i think that's one of the reasons we try to celebrate diversity in terms of social tolerance, in terms of equality of opportunity, but we should also remind ourselves that...
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Jan 4, 2019
01/19
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BLOOMBERG
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the chinese academy of social sciences says the country's population would decline within eight yearsbirth rate held steady at 1.6 children per woman. as trends persist, the world's most populous country could lose over 200 million people by 2065. japan's nikkei news has reported allegations against carlos ghosn. the paper said he used the special nissan fund to pay 48 million dollars to business is run by two acquaintances in the middle east. carlos ghosn, who denies wrongdoing, has been accused of understating pay and breach of trust. global news 24 hours a day, on-air and tictoc on twitter, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries. anna: thanks very much, debra mao. withs in asia diverge japanese equities slumping on their first trading day of the year as investors caught up with the negative news from weak economic data to apples sales outlook cut. shares in china rallied with u.s. futures after beijing confirmed trade talks between vice ministers next week. the yen slipped after yesterday's flash crash. things look different this time versus t
the chinese academy of social sciences says the country's population would decline within eight yearsbirth rate held steady at 1.6 children per woman. as trends persist, the world's most populous country could lose over 200 million people by 2065. japan's nikkei news has reported allegations against carlos ghosn. the paper said he used the special nissan fund to pay 48 million dollars to business is run by two acquaintances in the middle east. carlos ghosn, who denies wrongdoing, has been...
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Jan 3, 2019
01/19
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FOXNEWSW
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it's social science. we know it's true. rich people know it best of all.s why they get married before they have kids. that model works. increasingly marriage is a luxury only the affluent in america can afford. and, yet, and here is the bewildering and infuriating part. those very same affluent married people the ones who make virtually all the decisions in our society are doing pretty much nothing to help the people below them to help and stay married. rich people are happy to fight malaria in congo but working to raise men's wages in dayton or detroit that's crazy. this is negligence on a massive scale. both parties ignore the crisis in marriage. our mindless cultural leaders act like it's still 1961 and the biggest problem american families face is that sexism is preventing millions of housewives from becoming investment bankers or facebook executives. for our ruling class, more investment banking is almost always the answer. they teach us it's more virtuous to devote your life to some soulless corporation than it is to raise your own kids. sheryl sandb
it's social science. we know it's true. rich people know it best of all.s why they get married before they have kids. that model works. increasingly marriage is a luxury only the affluent in america can afford. and, yet, and here is the bewildering and infuriating part. those very same affluent married people the ones who make virtually all the decisions in our society are doing pretty much nothing to help the people below them to help and stay married. rich people are happy to fight malaria in...
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Jan 24, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN3
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data that we don't have and for example, on training, i sat for a month and literally read every social sciencerticle there was i did that so you didn't have to. back [ laughter ] >> my chief of staff that i literally wrote that section 3 times because she said no i know too much detail. over and over, there were broadway's eddie, one research had gotten into an employer and could look at the situation before and after real training. a lot of simulations and employers have got to feel comfortable with allowing researchers to come in, do the data analysis before let's do the same type of training and interventions that five different employers to data can be aggregated, that would be huge, and -- >> you are a lawyer, is that the fear? is that the roadblock, employers not wanting to peel back the curtain because they are afraid of some type of liability? >> i can tell you are the number of times that we've heard the hr virgin has a great idea with a cultural assessment survey and find this out in the council is like no. because , they are afraid. they are afraid if they do it, i actually think th
data that we don't have and for example, on training, i sat for a month and literally read every social sciencerticle there was i did that so you didn't have to. back [ laughter ] >> my chief of staff that i literally wrote that section 3 times because she said no i know too much detail. over and over, there were broadway's eddie, one research had gotten into an employer and could look at the situation before and after real training. a lot of simulations and employers have got to feel...
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Jan 10, 2019
01/19
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FOXNEWSW
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we do this topic a lot and we are pretty conversant with thebo social science on it.e never s seen that study. where are those numbers from? >> i've never seen that study. i posed that to somebody, to show me that stat, and show me how they can come up with that because i can show you the opposite. they sure if of yuma, arizona, published an article today where he talked about in 2005 when they started putting the fence, the wall up in his area, violent crime, all crime, drastically reduced in his area. >> tucker: so you are saying -- i don't want to blow anyone's mind here -- but the people telling us they were fact-checking this speech may not have reallyte known what thy were talking about? >> that is absolutely what i'm saying. >> tucker: i appreciate, mark morgan, you're coming out tonight. we are doing to know by our senior political analyst here at fox, brit hume. thanks auc lot for coming on. first just want to ask you by n the spectacle, not just of this beach and there were bottles by lastemocratic leaders night, but by the analysis that followed. you saw a
we do this topic a lot and we are pretty conversant with thebo social science on it.e never s seen that study. where are those numbers from? >> i've never seen that study. i posed that to somebody, to show me that stat, and show me how they can come up with that because i can show you the opposite. they sure if of yuma, arizona, published an article today where he talked about in 2005 when they started putting the fence, the wall up in his area, violent crime, all crime, drastically...
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Jan 7, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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unemployment as they predict to divorce the drives but the kind of effect you would typically see in social science literature and it is critical for children, children have better outcomes in families where at least one parent isn't working and strikingly from the work looking at the overall characteristics in different regions just being in a community where people are working turns out to be important for all of the children in this community. , most important for individuals and families i it is critical to the communities themselves. communities in which people are working and contributing to the economic vibrancy of the communities are ones where you will have more investment in everything from housing stock to public goods to engagement in social activities and in a lot of communities is it a soft nexus of community or wha wheret gets everybody out of the house and took a place they are interacting with people every day and to pause on that point, a question that comes up a lot when singing the praises of work is are there other things people do when they are not working so you've got all of
unemployment as they predict to divorce the drives but the kind of effect you would typically see in social science literature and it is critical for children, children have better outcomes in families where at least one parent isn't working and strikingly from the work looking at the overall characteristics in different regions just being in a community where people are working turns out to be important for all of the children in this community. , most important for individuals and families i...
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Jan 1, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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the book is really kind of a social science detective story. so let me retell the story in a different way. suppose that you, you're sitting at your desk in your study one day, and you're sitting there working, and at exactly 3:17 in the afternoon a book on your desk just bursts into flames. it just spontaneously come busts. you might be puzzled by that. [laughter] you might wonder, how did this happen? was it witchcraft? that would be a very strange thing to happen. and that's more or less what happened on campus in the fall of 2015. greg and i wrote our article in the summer of 2015 and it came out because greg was beginning to see all these trends, and i had just been to see them at nyu. how many of you know if i say the yale halloween issue with the nicholas and erica -- okay, most of you, but not all of you know. it's too long a story to tell, but the point is we saw these things happening. greg picked them up first, and then around november and halloween of 2015, things really burst into flames, there were protests at dozens or hundreds o
the book is really kind of a social science detective story. so let me retell the story in a different way. suppose that you, you're sitting at your desk in your study one day, and you're sitting there working, and at exactly 3:17 in the afternoon a book on your desk just bursts into flames. it just spontaneously come busts. you might be puzzled by that. [laughter] you might wonder, how did this happen? was it witchcraft? that would be a very strange thing to happen. and that's more or less...
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Jan 16, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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for example, on training, i sat for a month and i read literally every social science article that thereon training. i did that so you didn't have to. [laughing] one page, my chief of staff, i literally wrote that section three section three times and she kept saying no, no, no too much detail. over and over those only come up although studies, one researcher what actually gotten into, a lawyer, and could look at the situation for and after real training. in other words, a lot of simulation. employers have got to feel comfortable with allowing researchers to come in, do the data analysis before, let's do the same type of training and interventions at five different employers so that data can be aggregated anonymous. that would be huge. >> chai, you're a lawyer. is that the fear? is that the roadblock, legal, employers not wanting to peel back the curtain because they are afraid of some type of liability? >> i cannot tell you number of times, the h.r. person has a discredited are going to do cultural assessment survey, were going to find this out, the general counsel is like no. because t
for example, on training, i sat for a month and i read literally every social science article that thereon training. i did that so you didn't have to. [laughing] one page, my chief of staff, i literally wrote that section three section three times and she kept saying no, no, no too much detail. over and over those only come up although studies, one researcher what actually gotten into, a lawyer, and could look at the situation for and after real training. in other words, a lot of simulation....
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Jan 16, 2019
01/19
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ALJAZ
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wearing because the people who have done these people have picture eight hundred serious and social scienceagainst the people before we know what the government in crisis does we know what good leadership is when we see it and we also know what corrupt thieving blind disappears when we see it. well you would also continue to see the hash tag keep it on said w. as a side of the country protests in solidarity against the crackdown this group marched out ways embassy in her toria south africa and also in the embassy in london where protest was seen taking down the president's portrait is all we don't have those pictures that we will update that little a little bit later meanwhile rights groups have to be condemning the crackdown and zimbabwe's president who is currently in moscow has posted this message on facebook and also twitter addressing his offline nation saying that he is deeply saddened by the recent events which has witnessed violence and vandalism instead of peaceful and legal protests and he's now calling for calm but if you are currently in zimbabwe to connect with us if you can us
wearing because the people who have done these people have picture eight hundred serious and social scienceagainst the people before we know what the government in crisis does we know what good leadership is when we see it and we also know what corrupt thieving blind disappears when we see it. well you would also continue to see the hash tag keep it on said w. as a side of the country protests in solidarity against the crackdown this group marched out ways embassy in her toria south africa and...
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Jan 18, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN3
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eye 73
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on training, i sat for a month and i read literally every social science article that there was on train -- i did that so you didn't have to. my chief of staff, i wrote that section three times, because she kept saying, too much detail. there was only -- of all those studies, one researcher who had gotten to an employer and could look at the situation before and after real train iing. a lot of simulation. employers have got to feel comfortable with allowing researchers to come in, do the data analysis before. let's do the same type of training and interventions at five employers so the data can be aggregated, anonymous. that would be huge. >> you are a lawyer. is that the fear? is that the roadblock? employers not wanting to peel back the curtain, because they're afraid of some type of liability? >> i can not tenot tell you the person has this great idea. we will do a cultural assessment survey. we will find this out. the general counsel is like, no. they're afraid. i think there is some barrier if they never get the information back from the researcher. what they're afraid of it being d
on training, i sat for a month and i read literally every social science article that there was on train -- i did that so you didn't have to. my chief of staff, i wrote that section three times, because she kept saying, too much detail. there was only -- of all those studies, one researcher who had gotten to an employer and could look at the situation before and after real train iing. a lot of simulation. employers have got to feel comfortable with allowing researchers to come in, do the data...
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Jan 12, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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eye 41
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divorce rates extraordinarily higher relative to the kinds of effects you would typically see in social science literature. and work is critical for children. children have better outcomes in families where at least one parent is working. and even more strikingly from the work that's been done looking at the overall characteristics in different regions, just being in a community where people are working actually turns out to be very important to the outcomes of all of the children, in that community. so work's important for individuals. it is important for families. it is critical to communities themselves. communities in which people are working and contributing to the economic vibrancy of the community are ones where you are going to have more investments in everything from housing stock to public goods to engagement in social activities. in a lot of communities, work is itself a nexus of community. work is what gets everybody out of the house and to a place where they are interacting with other people every day. and just to pause on that point, one question that comes up a lot, when singing
divorce rates extraordinarily higher relative to the kinds of effects you would typically see in social science literature. and work is critical for children. children have better outcomes in families where at least one parent is working. and even more strikingly from the work that's been done looking at the overall characteristics in different regions, just being in a community where people are working actually turns out to be very important to the outcomes of all of the children, in that...
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Jan 1, 2019
01/19
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BLOOMBERG
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such deep-seated strengths in life sciences, in the humanities, the arts, such a commitment in social sciencesavors that are not simply involved in technology. we compete very successfully with stanford for students and faculty, so we are very pleased to be harvard, and we expect to remain harvard. ♪ drew: we want to support the needs of women on campus, but we don't think separate organizations are the way to accomplish what needs to be done. ♪ emily: what is harvard doing differently to train the worker for tomorrow? drew: differently from? emily: do you think harvard needs to do anything differently to arm workers with the skills necessary to succeed in the modern economy? drew: there have been changes in how we approach education over the past decade that respond in part to what you are saying. which is, we find our curriculum much more oriented, and our students much more eager for a hands-on experience in a variety of ways. there tends to be more internships or public service opportunities tied into a curricular offerings, doing and thinking are intertwined much more closely. emily: one
such deep-seated strengths in life sciences, in the humanities, the arts, such a commitment in social sciencesavors that are not simply involved in technology. we compete very successfully with stanford for students and faculty, so we are very pleased to be harvard, and we expect to remain harvard. ♪ drew: we want to support the needs of women on campus, but we don't think separate organizations are the way to accomplish what needs to be done. ♪ emily: what is harvard doing differently to...
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Jan 24, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN3
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election, and we did some in person focus groups, and then we did something a little bit more like social scienceresearch, retract very highly curated group of women, who didn't like the president, but like the governor. but had made up their mind about who they were going to vote for, and retract them from june through the election. and we talk to them on a regular basis. they talk to us, they talk to each other. and we learned so much about how they perceived the governor, and the issues and that sort of thing, so, you have to tell the truth, and the truth is, it was really important for the governor to differentiate from the president. in the state of maryland, president trump has very low approval ratings. that was an important thing. and these women were very attentive to that, they saw governor hogan put the interest 1st, people 1st, ahead of politics, and basically speaking out, on behalf of the environment, on behalf of immigration, or immigrants, it was important to them. what one of the 1st things that happened in one of these focus groups was, astounding to me. we were talking to these
election, and we did some in person focus groups, and then we did something a little bit more like social scienceresearch, retract very highly curated group of women, who didn't like the president, but like the governor. but had made up their mind about who they were going to vote for, and retract them from june through the election. and we talk to them on a regular basis. they talk to us, they talk to each other. and we learned so much about how they perceived the governor, and the issues and...
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Jan 23, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN3
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is that social science is systematically discourage graduate students from engaging in empirical research overseas. they do that because of their perceptions of the best ways to secure a tenure-track position is by working on, there are lots of different reasons, so she'll just do that because they feel these positions are better secured through working on domestic issues. political scientists have other reasons in the economist were working globally but with the universal model essentially. but across the board, there was not real deep conceptual texture lies knowledge, the way i think when tom was strained and i was trained when there was a lot more rees doors and a lot more resources and funding going into graduate support for training overseas, those kinds of things were drying up and faculty were discouraging students from doing it and saying the best way to get a job is to work on a domestic issue. that was really a surprise but the data of the interviews were clear . >> that's really interesting because it raises the question, are universities playing lip service to globalization b
is that social science is systematically discourage graduate students from engaging in empirical research overseas. they do that because of their perceptions of the best ways to secure a tenure-track position is by working on, there are lots of different reasons, so she'll just do that because they feel these positions are better secured through working on domestic issues. political scientists have other reasons in the economist were working globally but with the universal model essentially....
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Jan 11, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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students at each are taught language arts, math, science, social studies, but school a has advanced mathlike algebra one. school b does not. school a has 20 seconds of art, school b has one. schoolday offers multiple french classes, school b doesn't have any foreign languages. schoolday has banned, course, music, health education, industrial arts, consumer sciences. school b doesn't offer a single one of these. you might be surprised that these are not schools from opposite ends of the state. these two middle schools feed into the same high school. this is not an isolated case. it is happening across vermont so we must continue to address the inequality that exists. i heard you and believe me i recognize a change of this magnitude takes time. in the near term i believe the best opportunity for progress is in early care and learning to give all kids regardless of their background a strong foundation. we have taken important steps. let's build on it this year by working together to give every child an equal chance at success. last fall i identified a new revenue source to put toward these
students at each are taught language arts, math, science, social studies, but school a has advanced mathlike algebra one. school b does not. school a has 20 seconds of art, school b has one. schoolday offers multiple french classes, school b doesn't have any foreign languages. schoolday has banned, course, music, health education, industrial arts, consumer sciences. school b doesn't offer a single one of these. you might be surprised that these are not schools from opposite ends of the state....