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Browse news articles about J-PAL and our affiliated professors, and read our press releases and monthly global and research newsletters. For media inquiries, please email us.

Q&A: How can India achieve universal electrification?

A study by J-PAL affiliate Nicholas Ryan and coauthors finds that it may be counterproductive to view access to electricity as a right, rather than as a good that must be paid for.

June 2020 North America Newsletter

J-PAL North America's June newsletter highlights a New York Times op-ed by affiliated researchers Sara Heller and Judd Kessler on the importance of restoring summer jobs in New York, COVID-19 guidelines for education funders, and evidence-based strategies to support small businesses.

Mayor de Blasio, Bring Back Summer Jobs

J-PAL affiliates Sara Heller and Judd Kessler critique the decision to cancel New York's summer youth employment program this year, drawing on their research findings about the positive impacts of such programs.

Learning from the Lockdown

J-PAL Global Executive Director Iqbal Dhaliwal and Senior Policy Associate Samantha Friedlander argue that we need to learn as much as we can from the pandemic experience and adapt international development practices and research accordingly.

Covid-19: Adopting a new method of teaching | Opinion

J-PAL South Asia Research Scientist Harini Kannan argues that a school program tailored to suit children's needs during these uncertain times could be something that they can look forward to.

Post-pandemic — should we keep working from home?

J-PAL affiliate and Firms sector Co-Chair Nicholas Bloom discusses his research on the impact of working from home in an episode of The Pulse.

The institutional partnership model: Embedding evidence into the policy equation

J-PAL South Asia Senior Policy Manager Sharanya Chandran discusses how to capitalize on government interest in evidence-informed policy through building long-term institutional partnerships.

Hard Data for Hard Choices

Before COVID-19, social scientists had already established that cash transfers and mobile money are two of the most effective tools for assisting the poor and vulnerable. Now is the time for governments to act on those findings, and to build up additional data for the future.