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CommonWealth Magazine October 11, 2012 Making it in Massachusetts - Reports of the death of manufacturing
here, and across the country, have been greatly exaggerated. There is no
going back to our industrial heyday, but a new study says manufacturing
has a solid future in Massachusetts. In fact, one of the biggest
concerns is a possible shortage of trained workers.
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WBUR October 10, 2012 Advice to the next President: Income inequality and social mobility - With a growing body of evidence
to support that economic inequality suppresses growth and creates
instability, what should the next president do to reverse this long
standing trend? Northeastern University's Barry Bluestone and Boston Federal Reserve Bank economist Katharine Bradbury offer their thoughts.
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Boston Business Journal October 5, 2012 Champions in Education - Barry Bluestone - Barry Bluestone
launched the Kitty and Michael Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional
Policy in 1999, with the goal of creating a state-of-the-art applied
research facility at Northeastern University. Since then, the center has swelled to more than 30 staff and faculty,
adding an affiliated public policy school offering master’s and
doctoral programs, and become a major news maker with numerous reports
on housing, economic development and transportation.
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USA Today October 4, 2012 Murders in Chicago: What can stop the bloodbath? - Jack Levin, a sociology and criminology professor at Boston's
Northeastern University, says it's troubling that Chicago's murder count
is rising while it falls in other major cities. In 2010, Los Angeles
had 297 murders, the lowest since 1967. New York homicides have been
declining since 1990, when a record 2,245 fell in the nation's largest
city.
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The Boston Globe September 14, 2012 Obama and Romney economic advisers spar on taxes, US aid - In a Northeastern University classroom, the architect of President
Obama’s stimulus plan and a key economic adviser to presidential
candidate Mitt Romney laid out competing visions on how to repair the
nation’s economy — the issue that has come to define the election
campaign.
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The Atlantic Cities September 7, 2012 Could Co-Ops Help Solve Our College Grad Employment Crisis? - Before the Class of 2012 stepped off the dais and shed their caps and
gowns, their prospects for a seamless transition into the American
workforce looked poor. According to the Economic Policy Institute,
the unemployment rate for recent college graduates (ages 21-24) hovered
around 10 percent for the last year, while the underemployment rate
(the proportion of grads that have either suspended their job search or
aren’t working up to their capacity) was nearly double that at 19
percent.
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WBUR September 6, 2012 Former Gov. Dukakis Hits Romney on Economic Record - Over the years no one has been more candid about his 1988 presidential
campaign loss to George H.W. Bush than the candidate himself. Michael
Dukakis has been upfront in saying “I blew it.” At one point he even had
a 17-point lead. It gives Dukakis a unique perspective on what he hopes to hear Thursday night in Charlotte from President Obama.
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Inside Higher Ed September 3, 2012 Professors with Attitude - This
summer I was in Bali, conducting another of my social entrepreneurship
trainings for a group of Balinese students and students from my
university. In the past this program has been a real struggle for me and
for my assistants, caused by personality conflicts, cultural
misunderstandings, and less than helpful “partners” on the ground. And
my own attitude, it turns out, is a huge indicator of how much I will
enjoy the (sometimes) grueling six weeks of the program, but, more
importantly, how my students will experience my class.
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The Boston Globe September 1, 2012 White House releases recipe in beer brouhaha - As the White House recently learned, beer can also stir up deep and
sometimes angry passions. After weeks of refusing to release the
administration’s official home-brewed beer recipe, even as a petition
for it gained momentum and reporters repeatedly asked for it, beer
enthusiasts got their wish Saturday. The recipe for White House Honey Ale, believed to be the first beer brewed on the grounds of the White House, was released.
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CNN.com August 29, 2012 The real trouble begins after Isaac is gone - We don't yet know how heavy a blow Hurricane Isaac will deliver to
the Gulf Coast when it hits. But mindful of the devastation that
Hurricane Katrina left in its wake, Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and
Mississippi have declared states of emergency and evacuations have
begun. Public officials and emergency managers are getting good at
getting people out of harm's way. Unfortunately, where
official plans are likely to fall short is in helping evacuees to
quickly return to their storm-damaged communities and get back on their
feet.
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The Washington Post August 27, 2012 Do we 'parent' politics? The partisan ground between Democratic parents and their GOP teens - When David Burrows took on Barry Goldwater and Ayn Rand as
“mentors” at age 14, his parents wanted to know what else he was doing
that they might be ashamed of. Andrew LaGrone’s grandmother was
an Edmund Muskie delegate at the Democratic National Convention in
1972 and was stunned when Andrew became a Republican at 19.
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The Boston Globe August 26, 2012 Employers revisit violence prevention efforts - Many companies have developed or enhanced their on-the-job violence prevention programs in recent years, helping contribute to a steady decline in fatalities, according to specialists in workplace violence prevention.
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The Christian Science Monitor August 24, 2012 Behind Empire State shooting: A layoff, a gun and a targeted ex-boss - The deadly shooting near the landmark Empire State Building early Friday may be workplace-related, with a laid-off worker apparently targeting his former boss. Such violence is recurring, but it did not escalate after millions lost their jobs during the Great Recession.
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The Washington Post August 24, 2012 New poll finds Americans evenly divided in views of Muslims - Americans are almost evenly divided in how they view Muslims, according to a survey released Thursday(Aug. 23) by the Arab American Institute in Washington.
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The Boston Globe August 13, 2012 “Profiling reports spur call to action” - Reports of widespread racial profiling at Logan International Airport — and news of a federal investigation into the practice — have provoked concern and calls for change, but little surprise.
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The Atlantic August 10, 2012 “Making City Biking Less Scary” - Peter Furth, a civil and environmental engineering professor at Northeastern University, co-authors a new report out from the Mineta Transportation Institute that looks at how varying levels of "traffic stress" on different city streets can limit where people are willing to ride.
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The Boston Globe February 16, 2012 Colleges statewide see record applicants Dozens of local colleges and universities are seeing record numbers of freshman applicants this year, including Northeastern University.
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NECN February 15, 2012 Study examines racial disparities in Vermont policing A new Northeastern University study examined troopers' responses to traffic stops between July 2010 and June 2011.
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The Boston Globe February 14, 2012 Newt Gingrich ad warns of 80-year ‘drift to the left’ In November, according to Newt Gingrich, voters will decide whether “to decisively repudiate an 80 year drift to the left: a drift in our newsrooms; a drift in our colleges and universities; a drift with our judges; and a drift among elected politicians.”
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