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Full bibliography 237 resources
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Summary. This second book follows on the first. I taught a creativity and collaboration undergraduate seminar and for 4 years I focused on ethical considerations of creative work then how creative thinking could be used to proactively benefit the civic domain itself (civic creativity). For two years, students each wrote a "case of the future," researching the state of a particular nascent or emerging innovation (e.g., driverless car, e-cigarette, Bitcoin, happiness as an ultimate life goal) then systematically thinking through the ethical and civic implications (good and bad) that might occur. In addition to being a co-author on all cases, I wrote 3 introductory chapters framing the book and providing ways that readers (or professors) could use the book in ethics-related courses.
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Summary. The public believes that politicians in the US favor special interests over their constituents and that our political institutions have become corrupt--and they are right. A growing body of evidence shows that special interests have disproportionate sway over policy via campaign contributions and lobbying. In this book, the author presents this evidence in a logical, understandable way; he then illustrates how campaign contributions harm our economy, exacerbate inequality, and undermine our democracy. One of the most startling findings of the book is that campaign contributions led to the Financial Crisis and Great Recession. The author concludes that campaign contributions have effectively created an oligarchy in the US, and, thus, reform is needed to save our democracy. The final chapter of the book suggests a number of different reforms that could be pursued--and highlights some ways in which these reforms can be achieved.
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Summary. Our previous findings about how Brazilian voters react to corruption replicate in Argentina.
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Summary. Blog post on replicable data science to tackle corruption.
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Summary. Advocates are arguing that the Thirteenth Amendment prohibits usurious loans. An invitation to reframe unregulated consumer loans as a matter of rights.
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Summary. Recent work has offered competing explanations for the long-term evolution of corporate political action in the United States. In one, scholars have
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Summary. A decade after Congress gave the F.D.A. the power to regulate tobacco products like e-cigarettes, the federal government has repeatedly delayed or weakened efforts that could have protected teenagers.
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Summary. Includes discussion of the limited utility of transparency for checking legal/institutional corruption.
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Summary. Describes culpable behavior by opioid companies and the prospects for litigation to address it.
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Summary. Describes how commonly drug companies fail to adhere to obligations to disclose clinical trial results and how commonly they are willing to share clinical trial data. My collaboration with Dr. Miller is a direct result of my Safra fellowship.
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Summary. Juul is giving Meharry Medical College, a historically black institution, money for a research center that will study, among other things, Juul.
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Summary. Juul needs good science to prove to the F.D.A. that its e-cigarettes offer more benefits than risks. Some researchers say they are loath to take the company’s money.
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Summary. But it will only work if it takes a cue from the successful Democracy Voucher Program in Seattle
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Summary. This piece argues that, by framing individuals as the source of public health problems, nudging tends to serve the commercial interests of powerful corporate actors.
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Summary. Juul has told the F.D.A. it will do all it can to stop youth vaping. But in state capitols and city halls around the country, the company is embracing measures that undermine that vow.
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