Through
5/7
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Penn In the News
Jill E. Fisch of Penn Carey Law says that Delaware is a more obviously pro-shareholder state than Nevada.
Penn In the News
Susan M. Wachter of the Wharton School says that the number of young adults still living with their parents is at historic levels due to unaffordable housing costs.
Penn In the News
Kermit Roosevelt of Penn Carey Law says that Nikki Haley is offering a Confederate view of the Constitution and secession.
Penn In the News
Benjamin Keys of the Wharton School says that without a functioning insurance market there’s no functioning mortgage market or housing market.
Penn In the News
At a congressional hearing on AI deepfakes, Jennifer Rothman of Penn Carey Law invoked the music industry's long history of perpetuity deals to object to a provision that would allow artists to transfer the rights to their voice and likeness to a third party.
Penn In the News
Joni E. Finney of the Graduate School of Education says that Gov. Josh Shapiro’s efforts to tackle higher education reform in Pennsylvania are an accomplishment but fail to address the problem with Penn State’s Commonwealth campuses.
Penn In the News
The Penn Wharton Budget Model estimates that the cost of doubling the SALT cap to $20,000 for married filers would reduce federal tax revenue by about $12 billion.
Penn In the News
Sigal Ben-Porath of the Graduate School of Education says that faculty members and academic leaders can promote depolarization by encouraging constructive dialogue in and out of class, cultivating viewpoint diversity within boundaries and expanding civic spaces.
Penn In the News
Kate Shaw of Penn Carey Law says that the Supreme Court seems to be inching toward the idea that politically corrupt conduct is constitutionally privileged.
Penn In the News
Lawton Robert Burns of the Wharton School isn’t convinced that the movement toward greater price transparency will be a magic bullet that brings down drug prices.