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Lincoln Mitchell examines criticisms against VP Kamala Harris and their consequences for the Democratic Party.
Gregory Rattray says the rehearsals to respond to cyberattack scenarios by key financial institutions provide more confidence in readiness than they should.
Regarding the scenario of Russia vetoing renewal of the EUFOR mandate in November as the German politician Christian Schmidt becomes the new international High Representative in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Tanya Domi says that the U.S. and Britain should already be thinking about how to prevent that scenario "not in a month" but "now."
“The idea that China was behaving badly is already the wrong premise for this investigation to start,” Jeffrey Sachs says about the pandemic origins discussion. “If lab work was somehow responsible (for the pandemic), the likelihood that it was both the U.S. and China working together on a scientific initiative is very high.”
SAP and SIPA are working together to improve diversity in cybersecurity talent.
Anya Schiffrin writes on big tech influence, opportunities and solutions.
Thomas B. Edsall writes on Eric Adams's across-the-board success with working-class voters of all races and ethnicities in the Democratic primary, quoting Robert Shapiro: “Black voters are a moderating force and should tell the party to focus on economic, health care, and equality issues, and less on culture war issues.”
Scholars from SIPA's Center on Global Energy Policy contributed to a new analysis that includes long-overlooked factors like transportation, packaging, and waste.
Ester Fuchs rejects conspiracy theories about NYC's mayoral election, and adds that Donald Trump is only doing it to make people suspicious: "Incompetence is not an effort to manipulate the vote."
Jason Bordoff gives a more holistic view of the fight against climate change and fossil fuels’ role in it: “I think we’re seeing the aggregation of several tipping points that really are going to lead to significant change.”