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From Boston to NYC: Building the Northeast Corridor as the World’s Most Powerful Urban Innovation Engine
Along the 215 miles connecting Boston and New York City runs one of the world's most concentrated pathways of intellectual capital, research infrastructure, and innovation capacity. Yet this corridor has largely functioned as a collection of distinct regional ecosystems rather than as an integrated system. The question is no longer whether these cities can innovate independently—they demonstrably can, but by how much can their collective impact on society’s most pressing chal
PII
3 days ago6 min read
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Build With, Not For: Making Public Health Tech That Actually Works
The challenge isn't a lack of innovation or need; it's a fundamental mismatch between how private companies typically build technology and how public health systems actually function.
ITGH
Aug 282 min read
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New Research Stream: Our Health, Technology, and the Law: Regulations to Drive Economic Development
In an era defined by rapid technological advancements, the intricate relationship between our health, technology, and the law is gaining...
Khahlil Louisy
Feb 27, 20242 min read
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Article: Child Brain Development, Household Poverty, and Economic Mobility: How Data from Connected Devices can Inform Interventional Policies
Child brain development is associated with levels of household poverty, which impacts long-run economic outcomes
Khahlil Louisy
Feb 26, 20242 min read
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Meet former Summer Program Students: Sam Borton
Name: Sam Borton School: Southern Methodist University Major(s): Economics; Statistical Science; Markets & Culture Hometown: Naperville,...
ITGH
Jul 6, 20212 min read
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