Antara Haldar is an Associate Professor of Empirical Legal Studies at the University of Cambridge and a visiting faculty member at Harvard University. She is currently on academic leave from Cambridge and holds a Fellowship at Stanford University.
Antara Haldar is an Associate Professor of Empirical Legal Studies at the University of Cambridge and a visiting faculty member at Harvard University. She is currently on academic leave from Cambridge and holds a Fellowship at Stanford University.
One of the more surprising - and often missed - aspects of Francis' 12-year papacy was his emergence as an incisive economic visionary, urging the world to place moral values above markets and metric
Our international institutions simply are not designed to address systemic issues indifferent to national borders
A reckoning is in order, not just with Trumpism but with the assumptions that made it possible in the first place
The vaccines allowed Covid to be treated as an aberration, but we must not forget what it really was: A preview of the kind of planetary challenges that await us
Mainstream economics has largely dismissed the insights from microfinance as folksy, feel-good anecdotes
The Washington Consensus never had any time for such questions, and its ghost continues to impede the emergence of a new development paradigm based on cultural contexts and human cognition
Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman's first major contribution was his and Tversky's groundbreaking 1974 study on judgment and uncertainty