News 

Des articles sur J-PAL et nos communiqués de presse 
15 mai 2012
J-PAL South Asia

Launch of J-PAL South Asia Newsletter | 20 Million Children Dewormed in Bihar and Delhi

15 mai 2012
Huffington Post

Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) are interrelated with existing global development challenges but the solution is readily at hand.

14 mai 2012
The Telegraph India

After receiving the Shera’s Shera at the STAR Ananda Shera Bangali Awards 2012, Abhijit Banerjee sat down with the Telegraph for an interview.

14 mai 2012
Copenhagen Consensus Center

The Copenhagen Consensus 2012 Expert Panel identifies the smartest ways to allocate money to respond to ten of the world’s biggest challenges.

13 mai 2012
Bloomberg

The purpose of randomized control trials is not to debunk the idea of helping poor countries. On the contrary, such work bolsters the case for aid by ensuring that dollars are well spent.

13 mai 2012
Diario La Tercera

Ryan Cooper, executive director of J-PAL Latin America, recommends Dean Karlan and Jacob Appel's book "More Than Good Intentions" to Chilean readers, highlighting the book's key points and emphasizing the importance of scientific evidence in policymaking.

12 mai 2012
Manila Bulletin

The Computer Access Mentorship Program (CAMP) is a step into the future for a program that has successfully served 882 public schools, 24,654 public school teachers, and a little over a million students, as well as distributed almost 204,000 children’s books over the course of 12 years.

11 mai 2012
The Economist

An absence of optimism may play a large role in keeping people trapped in poverty.

8 mai 2012
The Washington Post

It sounds too good to be true: If we could just swap out dirty indoor cooking stoves in the developing world with cleaner versions, we could cut pollution, save lives, and slow climate change. Promising, yes? But, like most things that sound too good to be true, it’s not that easy.

8 mai 2012
Council of Foreign Relations

J-PAL Affiliate Paul Niehaus discusses how a new NGO–enabled by the rapid spread of mobile technology–is experimenting with cash transfers to alleviate poverty.