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Lessons from policy theories for the pursuit of equity in health, education and gender policy

Paul Cairney

This post first appeared on the Policy & Politics blog. It summarizes an article published in Policy & Politics. Could policy theories help to understand and facilitate the pursuit of equity (or reduction of unfair inequalities)? We are producing a series … Continue reading →

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Steven Brint: Biden's Student Loan Cancellation Plan: Too Good to Be True?

Policy Chats

In this episode, Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Sociology Steven Brint talks with a student from the UC Riverside School of Public Policy about Student Loan Forgiveness. About Steven Brint : Steven Brint is a Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Sociology at the University of California, Riverside.

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Biden's Student Loan Cancellation Plan: Too Good to Be True?

Policy Chats

In this episode, Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Sociology Steven Brint talks with a student from the UC Riverside School of Public Policy about Student Loan Forgiveness. About Steven Brint : Steven Brint is a Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Sociology at the University of California, Riverside.

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Biden's Student Loan Cancellation Plan: Too Good to Be True?

Policy Chats

In this episode, Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Sociology Steven Brint talks with a student from the UC Riverside School of Public Policy about Student Loan Forgiveness. About Steven Brint : Steven Brint is a Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Sociology at the University of California, Riverside.

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Government Mortgage Interest Rates: A Serious Discussion about the Intertwined Topics of Risk Adjustment and Cross-subsidies

The Stoop (NYU Furman Center)

The RFI document 20 itself has given the FHFA an opportunity to explain what it did and why and to educate the public on various aspects of the topic. However, it is very hard to argue from a public policy viewpoint that taxpayers should indeed be implicitly subsidizing those types of loans. It is discussed below. [19]