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Written by John LounsburyIn February, Jonathan Levy, Professor in the Department of History and the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago, gave a lecture at Dartmouth College on the changes in American capitalism over the past four decades. He discusses how the uses of capital have changed drastically over that time and relates it to the broader historical events of the period.
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A recording of our event on the causes and consequences of the deepening care crisis and the possibilities for establishing a new politics of care, boldly reimagined.
COVID-19 has shone all too bright a light onto the problems that beset health and social care. Yet, even before the pandemic, it was clear our health and well-being was far from guaranteed. Years of neoliberal restructuring, austerity measures, the pursuit of profit as well as structural racism have created devastating vulnerabilities and entrenched profound inequalities in the access to care that go hand in hand with a systemic devaluation of the work of caring.
As a new cohort from Hopkins prepares to join the Fulbright U.S. Student Program, take a look back at the students who have explored the world as Fulbright awardees
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Democracy Rules has been called A much-anticipated guide to saving democracy, from one of our most essential political thinkers.
Jan-Werner Müller is Roger Williams Straus Professor of Social Sciences at Princeton University. He has been a fellow at All Souls College, Oxford and has held many visiting professorships. His public affairs commentary has appeared in The New York Times, The Guardian, Foreign Affairs, The New York Review of Books, and the London Review of Books, among other publications.
The Zoom Webinar event, sponsored by the Political Economy Project, is free and open to the public. No registration needed. To join the Webinar, click here: https://dartmouth.zoom.us/j/96023140112?pwd=WnQwUzh3Znd6V1FleEMrOHJPRzhlUT09 or sign in with the Webinar ID 960 2314 0112 and Passcode 487419