public-policy

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Monroe County has three new bus routes operated by the Mountain Transit Authority as a result of grassroots organizing efforts.

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We know how to produce clean water. Why don't we have enough of it?

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Earlier this month the Trump administration announced hefty 25% tariffs on Canadian and Mexican imports, along with an additional 10% tariffs on Chinese imports.

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The U.S. was once the world’s most geographically mobile society. Now we’re stuck in place—and that’s a very big problem.

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Let politicians know what you want.

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Volunteers, not FEMA, are the bedrock of disaster response. How do we best support them?

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The community of Culdesac, Arizona, was designed for pedestrians and cyclists. And residents love it.

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The Biden administration’s push to close an obscure loophole on imports highlights just how disruptive the Temu model really is.

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How AI Could Transform the World for the Better

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Minor-party candidates are a waste of time. But minor parties that can cross-endorse major-party candidates have real juice—and can make a huge difference.

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The House Energy and Commerce Committee is holding a hearing tomorrow on “sunsetting” Section 230. Despite facing criticism, Section 230 has undeniably been a cornerstone in the architect…

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Datacenter GPUs and some consumer cards now exceed performance limits

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Beijing will be thrilled by this nerfed silicon

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Ten states have uninsured rates below 5 percent. What are they doing right?

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As of now, the West Virginia Department of Education boasts that the state has one of the most effective school-entry vaccine preventable laws in the nation.

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From Australia to Ontario, cities are taking up unnecessary stretches of concrete and asphalt, allowing nature to take hold in their place.

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These days, when you work as a librarian in America, there is no lack of emergencies.

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Ranked-choice voting could be on the November ballot in four states, a sign of the system’s rising popularity. Most conservatives have opposed it. But some say that could be changing.

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Ethanol is a comically inefficient form of solar energy—and a toxic one. Putting regular solar panels on some of that land would be better.

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Farmers in Missouri are opposing the Grain Belt Express, a transmission line that will connect wind farms in Kansas with cities in the East.

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A seismic change is coming to American transportation.

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The United States and our allies have every legal right to transfer frozen Russian assets to Kyiv.

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An Appalachian school district’s daring experiment in economic integration.

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A grass-roots movement aims to recast urban living in Paris and other cities around the world through a hyperlocal prism of neighborliness.

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Economic dynamism is vaulting the southern portion of the vast region ahead of its northern cousin.

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“We've had a love affair with paving things for several generations." The Depave movement is trying to change that.

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One of two gun stores owned by Representative Andrew Clyde in Georgia, Clyde Armory in Athens, was placed in a monitoring program in 2020 and 2021.

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It’s fueling the affordable housing crisis, worsening flooding, and driving us nuts.

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In southwest Colorado, a cooperative and a land trust partnered to preserve affordable housing.

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Oregon decriminalized all drugs, and overdoses have surged.

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The Biden administration thinks it can preserve America’s technological primacy by cutting China off from advanced computer chips. Could the plan backfire?

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Voter suppression isn’t what it’s cracked up to be.

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Bill Gates writes about visiting Kemmerer, Wyoming, the future site of the fourth-generation Natrium nuclear power plant being designed by TerraPower.

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It’s not easy to see inside a black-box. Here’s how WIRED journalists report on the technologies that quietly shape our lives.

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The decision would allow an enormous $8 billion drilling project in the largest expanse of pristine wilderness in the United States.

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A major advance in translation technology means that Ukrainians can inform and debunk in real time. The world hasn’t seen a weapon quite like it before.

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Reports of their inevitable collapse are greatly exaggerated.

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The tech giant had already remade the virtual world. For a brief period, it also tried to make it easier for people in the Bay Area to get to work. Then it gave up.

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The latest American trade restrictions could significantly set back China’s semiconductor ambitions.

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Earlier this summer, a group of anti-Trump and moderate Republicans and Democrats launched a new political party called the Forward Party. On the surface, this movement echoes recent polls indicati…

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If the U.S. had had a single-payer universal health care system in 2020, nearly 212,000 American lives would have been saved that year, according to a new study

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Insurance companies are successfully dictating reforms in police departments, a movement driven by the large settlements out of use-of-force cases.

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What are letters of marque and reprisal, and who is on the US’s list of Block Persons?

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Ignore the haters: living standards have improved a lot since the 1980s.

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After a year of reporting on the tax machinations of the ultrawealthy, ProPublica spotlights the top tax-avoidance techniques that provide massive benefits to billionaires.

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The ubiquitous dollar store is the American dream writ small.

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Americans are rightly angry about inflation. A strong labor market is not enough reason to celebrate. But, we are coming out of, not going into the hurricane.

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Wildlife crossings cut down on roadkill. But are they really a boon for conservation?

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It's not always easy to predict the timing of a recession and what that means for the stock market.

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Some charts on what's good and what's bad.

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Cops have been given an incredible set of legal powers immunizing them from the fatal errors of their own decisions—including their decision to do nothing in Uvalde, Texas.

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Citizens’ assemblies can help us better address societal challenges, overcome polarization and strengthen trust.

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We are a community of activists, artists, entrepreneurs, and scholars committed to using mechanism design to inspire radical social change.

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This article is part of the contribution made by the US Army War College to the series “Compete and Win: Envisioning a Competitive Strategy for the Twenty-First Century.” The series […]

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Putin’s military moves are rallying Ukrainians and unifying NATO.

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The political, moral, and visceral considerations behind assassination.

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The Biden Administration faces a potential confrontation with a longtime rival that is better armed and more hard-line than at any time in its modern history.

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No. But we can give America a big economic boost while boosting our moral image.

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Sewage epidemiology has been embraced in other countries for decades, but not in the U.S. Will Covid change that?

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With the right federal response, it could become a model of renewal for other places around the country that prosperity has left behind.

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DPD Chief Pazen, who is fond of the STAR program, says it frees up officers to do their jobs: fight crime.

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If America wants to keep China from setting the global course of science, we need a crash program to recruit international talent.

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Streetcar, bus, and metro systems have been ignoring one lesson for 100 years: Service drives demand.

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Deep reinforcement learning has trained AIs to beat humans at complex games like Go and StarCraft. Could it also do a better job at running the economy?

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It’s theoretically possible to become invisible to cameras. But can it catch on?

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The question of walking distance in transit is much bigger than it seems.  A huge range of consequential decisions — including stop spacing, network structure, travel time, reliability standards, frequency and even mode choice — depend on assumptions about how far customers will be willing to walk.  The same issue also governs the amount of […]

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If you decide to drive in downtown Oslo, be forewarned: You won’t be able to park on the street.

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There’s a language for talking about hot-button issues. And we’re not learning it.

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Wherever you find advocates for saner transportation, their dream scenario usually hinges on the same outcome: making cities blissfully free of cars. To this end, the Spanish city of Pontevedra, population 84,000, has done something remarkable: it has reduced car use in its historic core by 90 percent, and citywide...

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The Congress for New Urbanism ranks the most-loathed urban freeways in North America—and makes the case for tearing them down.

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There is a “brain gain” afoot that suggests a national homecoming to less bustling spaces.

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Eric Klinenberg is the author of a book called Palaces for the People: How Social Infrastructure Can Help Fight Inequality, Polarization, and the Decline of Civic Life. The phrase “palaces for the people” actually comes from Andrew Carnegie who was known as a titan of the Gilded Age and one of the wealthiest people in

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Only the Netherlands has a higher average compulsory payment wedge than the US.

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People who are able to take vaccines but refuse to do so are the moral equivalent of drunk drivers

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Guests are transforming the sleepy town into a major destination for tourists seeking the "real Japan."

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A development expert says small cities and towns can be catalysts for lagging rural counties

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I was in Taipei the past few weeks working on a documentary with friends. Because of a busy schedule, it wasn't like my usual travels abroad for fun, it felt more like a work trip. Still, even if I'd been there purely for vacation, I would've wanted to try a different mode of travel, one less focuse

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If your growth strategy only works as long as wealthy people live in your town, your growth strategy is deeply fragile.