Health
The Costs of Misdiagnosis
Quality, not access, will define the future of global health. We've developed a platform to improve health-care quality worldwide.
How an innovative public-private partnership responded rapidly to keep 82,000 families fed during a government shutdown.
Quality, not access, will define the future of global health. We've developed a platform to improve health-care quality worldwide.
Civil servants are more likely to resist authoritarianism when they are supported by peers, ombuds offices, and professional associations.
Lessons from Brazil on how science philanthropy can and should act in the face of political hostility.
The Making Missing Markets initiative is marshaling funds and support groups to help towns across the United States.
Philanthropies concerned with toxic polarization and growing political extremism should invest in community organizing.
Ukrainian civil society is training both civilians and military on first aid and emergency medical response.
In contrast to the worldview shaping the AI era, the true value of an innovative economy lies not just in outputs, but in the lived human experience of creating the new.
A response to nine essays on renewing the purpose of public education
The next era of public education will be judged less by the elegance of its ideas than by whether it responds, with humility and pragmatism, to the people it exists to serve.
Green hydrogen partnerships in the Middle East and North Africa are sidelining the civil society organizations they claim to empower, repeating the sins of colonialism.
To decarbonize infrastructure, we need to look beyond technological fixes and learn to build coalitions.
To meet the moment, we need to build the middle ground between philanthropy and commercial investing.
CEOs who take political stances command more credibility with the public when their companies embrace corporate social responsibility.
The problems are big, the time is short, and the resources are limited.
As AI begins to transform education, work, and social life, we need to focus on developing and expanding capacities essential for human flourishing.
In a world that no longer behaves like a scalable system, success must be something other than growth.
The United States is living through a second Gilded Age. But unlike yesterday's magnates, today's billionaires prefer to write checks to existing organizations. They should instead build institutions that last.
Why the ghost of Paul Farmer wants you scaring the horses at Skoll