Each publication developed under this initiative focuses on a distinct aspect of health and innovation, from artificial intelligence in healthcare, to rethinking national health frameworks, to advancing heat-health resilience.
The federal government is closely examining how it plays a role in supporting students, families, and educators – reimagining its approach to funding education R&D, pausing much of its investment in education outside the U.S., and completely reconceiving the structure of agencies responsible for education.
We’re seeking proposals that identify specific fairness harms associated with AI and propose actionable policy solutions at the federal, state, and local levels.
Through the cultivation of academic networks and publishing research that maps directly to learning agendas, we are helping to operationalize the next generation of evidence-based governance.
FAS and the Good Science Project partnered to crowdsource ideas for a scientific enterprise that better serves the nation. A diverse group of experts put forth their ideas for science reform.
AI safety is a rapidly evolving field that draws attention from a diverse range of policymakers across the political spectrum, including those in Congress, federal agencies, and state and local governments.
From using AI to optimize power grids to accelerating clean energy R&D, AI holds huge potential, while also introducing new challenges related to climate, equity, infrastructure, security, and sustainability.
We sit on the verge of another Presidential election – and we see opportunity for meaningful, science-based policy innovations that can appeal to lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.
What steps should the U.S. take to address China’s growing global share of legacy chip manufacturing?
National extreme heat resilience requires a “whole of government” federal approach. Here are 18 policy ideas to inspire and inform federal action to tackle our increasingly hot and devastating summers.
As artificial intelligence evolves, so does the urgency for legislation to manage both the risks and opportunities associated with it.
The U.S. is short 3.8 million housing units to keep up with household formation. Here are twenty bold policy ideas to fix that.