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Business & Law

How will the workplace change in 2025?
A bustling office space.

Image: iStock/piranka

How will the workplace change in 2025?

The Wharton School’s Peter Cappelli expects incremental changes in the workplace this year, a continuation of bigger trends that began during the pandemic.

From Knowledge at Wharton

Why the most successful companies are scalable

Why the most successful companies are scalable

Giant companies stay on top because they’re both more productive and scalable than their competitors, according to research from Wharton and the School of Arts & Sciences.

From Knowledge at Wharton

2 min. read

Forging pathways to careers in legislation and public policy
Law students seated outdoors in front of Penn Carey Law.

Image: Courtesy of Penn Carey Law

Forging pathways to careers in legislation and public policy

Penn Carey Law’s Legislative Clinic, now in its 28th year, offers students the chance to gain a new perspective by delving into the legislative process by which those laws are crafted.

From Penn Carey Law

Dorothy Roberts on reproductive rights and justice
Dorothy Roberts teaching a class at Penn Carey Law.

Image: Courtesy of Penn Carey Law

Dorothy Roberts on reproductive rights and justice

PIK Professor Roberts designed her Penn Carey Law course around a reproductive justice framework, which extends far beyond access to abortion.

From Penn Carey Law

What’s the future of cities?
Illustration of a person walking to a building in a city, one side is abandoned, the other side is revitalized.

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What’s the future of cities?

Before COVID-19, major U.S. urban centers were enjoying a resurgence. Now decreased occupancy has downtown economies and municipal budgets feeling the pinch. Wharton faculty research suggests that how cities navigate the next few years could be crucial.

Janine White for Wharton Magazine

The versatility of the JD/MPA degree
Outside of Penn Carey Law from sidewalk.

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The versatility of the JD/MPA degree

Julian Lutz will graduate in May with an MPA from the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs in addition to his JD from the University of Pennsylvania’s Carey Law School.

From Penn Carey Law

Power and possibility at the U.S. Supreme Court
The U.S. Supreme Court.

Image: iStock/YayaErnst

Power and possibility at the U.S. Supreme Court

“Curation, Narration, Erasure: Power and Possibility at the U.S. Supreme Court,” an article by Seaman Family University Professor Karen M. Tani, analyzes the 2023 Supreme Court term, including major controversies over presidential power, firearms regulation, reproductive rights, and the administrative state.

From Penn Carey Law

Wharton MBA student is out of this world
Jameel Janjua in front of an F-16.

Image: John Pingry

Wharton MBA student is out of this world

Jameel Janjua discusses his interest in spaceflight, the fastest aircraft he has flown, the effect of supersonic speed on the body, attending Wharton, and his first time in space.
The future of finance
A hand holding a crystal ball with finance charts and graphs inside.

Image: iStock/SergeyNivens

The future of finance

Hosted by Wharton finance professor Itay Goldstein, this four-part podcast series takes a deep dive into the cutting-edge insights and pioneering perspectives of innovation experts in the finance industry.

From Knowledge at Wharton

How are companies really using AI?
Two developers working on computer screens.

Image: iStock/RossHelen

How are companies really using AI?

Wharton’s Stefano Puntoni talks about the key findings of a new report that reveals a seismic shift in firms’ attitudes and uses of AI in just a short time.

From Knowledge at Wharton