The last few decades have seen intense scrutiny of the role of experts in policymaking. Yet issues like climate change and the Covid-19 pandemic appear impossible to address without following scientific expertise. Jens Steffek argues humanity has little choice but to empower expert-led international organisations to tackle the challenges of the future
The nature of design has always been related to socio-technological forces. In the twentieth century...
Business communities have high hopes for artificial intelligence (AI), but will the current stage of...
In this blog, LSE Visiting Fellow Dr Velislava Hillman asserts that the newly proposed IEEE standard...
In The Great Endarkenment, Elijah Millgram argues that the hyper-specialization of expert domains ha...
Management pays a lot of attention to new ideas and cutting-edge technologies, but most of their res...
Did the educational background of world leaders make a difference to responses to the Covid-19 pande...
The problems behind the recent exam results chaos illustrate a more general need to rethink which fa...
Chloe Anthony and Emily Lydgate write that, while the potential for conflict between trade and clima...
Furloughing is hardly sustainable over time. Differentiated policies are needed to protect existing ...
Given the increasing trend towards knowledge-based economies, it is important for policymakers to un...
Jonathan White explains why analogies associated with public health tend to be used in areas unrelat...
European integration was once thought of as a largely technocratic process built around consensus, b...
Business schools and universities across the world are being swept up by a diversified array of deco...
This paper discusses an emerging context in which design expertise is being applied – the making of ...
For over three decades, the capability approach proposed and developed by Amartya Sen and Martha Nus...
The nature of design has always been related to socio-technological forces. In the twentieth century...
Business communities have high hopes for artificial intelligence (AI), but will the current stage of...
In this blog, LSE Visiting Fellow Dr Velislava Hillman asserts that the newly proposed IEEE standard...
In The Great Endarkenment, Elijah Millgram argues that the hyper-specialization of expert domains ha...
Management pays a lot of attention to new ideas and cutting-edge technologies, but most of their res...
Did the educational background of world leaders make a difference to responses to the Covid-19 pande...
The problems behind the recent exam results chaos illustrate a more general need to rethink which fa...
Chloe Anthony and Emily Lydgate write that, while the potential for conflict between trade and clima...
Furloughing is hardly sustainable over time. Differentiated policies are needed to protect existing ...
Given the increasing trend towards knowledge-based economies, it is important for policymakers to un...
Jonathan White explains why analogies associated with public health tend to be used in areas unrelat...
European integration was once thought of as a largely technocratic process built around consensus, b...
Business schools and universities across the world are being swept up by a diversified array of deco...
This paper discusses an emerging context in which design expertise is being applied – the making of ...
For over three decades, the capability approach proposed and developed by Amartya Sen and Martha Nus...
The nature of design has always been related to socio-technological forces. In the twentieth century...
Business communities have high hopes for artificial intelligence (AI), but will the current stage of...
In this blog, LSE Visiting Fellow Dr Velislava Hillman asserts that the newly proposed IEEE standard...