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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.

Pre-employment cards shown to improve recipients' know-how: Hartarto

Indonesia's Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto shares the outcomes of a pre-employment card program conducted by J-PAL Southeast Asia and Rumah Presisi Indonesia.

Odisha: Students to learn gender equity in schools from this academic year

The Government of Odisha will begin a collaboration with J-PAL that will introduce a gender equity curriculum into Odisha schools during the 2022-2023 academic year.

End the pandemic of violence against women

J-PAL Senior Policy Associate Isabela Salgado writes with Vandana Sharma, a global health researcher at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, on how to use evidence to target the root causes of violence against women.

February 2022 Newsletter

In the February 2022 newsletter, we highlight the launch of J-PAL’s newest sector, Social Protection, along with the Social Protection Initiative, the first-ever entrepreneurship and enterprise development-focused funding window of the Jobs and Opportunity Initiative, and the accomplishments of a...

Five vital signs for scaling your big idea

NPR
J-PAL affiliate John List shares lessons from his new book, "The Voltage Effect: How To Make Good Ideas Great And Great Ideas Scale," on how evidence can be used to inform policymaking at scale.

Norms that bind us: The free woman who walks in chains

J-PAL Policy and Research Advisor Joy Kiiru discusses research on gender norms in Kenya, funded by the Gender and Economic Agency Initiative.

January 2022 North America Newsletter

J-PAL North America's January Newsletter features ways we are leveraging evidence to promote housing stability, new research results from the Baby's First Years study, and a new op-ed on evidence in education.

Cash Aid to Poor Mothers Increases Brain Activity in Babies, Study Finds

A recently published study, co-authored by J-PAL affiliates Lisa Gennetian and Greg Duncan, finds that unconditional cash transfers to mothers increased brain functioning for their young children.