You don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s gone
Canada’s carbon price: You don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s gone
Canada’s carbon price: You don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s gone
"One of the key principles of brainstorming is to suspend judgment."
Yasheng Huang discussed why China's model for economic development holds appeal for countries looking for an alternative to the Washington model.
A paper by Sinan Aral and co-authors discovered that high-paying jobs often come through "weak ties" — for example, people who are acquaintances.
In 1988, less than 15% of Boston Public Schools' Black students were in "intensely segregated" schools, by 2003 it had jumped to 50%.
"There is pretty much nothing that humans do as a meaningful occupation that generative AI can now do."
A carbon tax could raise $2 trillion over a decade putting a huge dent in the federal budget deficit.
"If Chinese domestic policy doesn’t change substantially, the pace of technological and scientific progress is going to slow down."
President Dr. Mokgweetsi EK Masisi of Botswana delivered a keynote speech at the conference, emphasizing the pivotal role entrepreneurship can play in driving prosperity for emerging economies.
Ratcheting ambition to limit warming to 1.5 °C – trade-offs between emission reductions and carbon dioxide removal