Welcome
Affiliates of the MIT Global Diversity Lab study the relationship between human diversity, development, and dignity in the United States and around the world. Our research aims to inform scholarship, policy and practice; and we seek to train future leaders and scholars through teaching, advising, and global outreach. Our work is motivated by the observation that increasingly diverse societies face both great challenges and opportunities:
On the one hand, real and perceived differences of ethnicity, race, religion, and national origin continue to be the basis for bias, discrimination, and conflict. Ethnic minorities, immigrants, and refugees face hate speech, political exclusion, and violence.
On the other hand, some of the world’s most productive organizations and societies identify diversity as core to their success. The mixing of people from around the world – and the sharing of art, culture, and ideas — is the hallmark of the world’s most prosperous urban centers.
Ultimately, in the face of diversity, different answers to the question of “who is us” will affect global responses to the world’s most pressing problems, including the climate emergency, epidemic threat, poverty, and insecurity.
At the MIT Global Diversity Lab, we intend to distill lessons about how to harness the value of diversity and to mitigate conflict through careful social science research, informed by work in a range of disciplines.
-
Government’s
invisible hand in
developing
countriesMIT political scientist and Global Diversity Lab Affiliate, Noah Nathan’s new book, “The Scarce State,” looks at the way seemingly…
-
Discrimination and
Defiant PrideOn May 2nd, 2023, Mashail Mallik of Harvard University presented her paper ‘Discrimination and Defiant Pride: How the Demand for…
-
Mai Hassan speaks
to The New Yorker
about SudanRead Global Diversity Lab Member Mai Hassan’s interview with Isaac Chotine of The New Yorker here: https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/the-failed-coup-proofing-behind-the-recent-violence-in-sudan
-
Bureaucratic
Composition and
Support for
RedistributionOn April 4th, 2023 Pavithra Suryanarayan of the London School of Economics presented her paper ‘When Losing The State Drives…
-
Do Neighborhoods
Empower or
Disenfranchise?On Feb 21st, 2023 Pavlos Vasilopoulous and Haley McAvay of the University of York presented their paper ‘Do Neighborhoods Empower…
-
GDL Faculty Affiliate
Mai Hassan featured in
MIT NewsIn an MIT News Faculty Profile Mai Hassan talks about her research on bureaucracies, regime changes and civil society in…
-
GDL Faculty Affiliate
Noah Nathan
featured in
MIT NewsIn MIT News’ recent faculty profile on Noah Nathan talks about what drew him to studying urban transformations in Accra,…
-
GDL Alumni in
the SpotlightDarien Brown worked on climate-related research in the summer of 2020, as a visiting RA to MIT’s Global Diversity Lab…
-
Intergroup
Avoidance: Evidence
from IsraelEarlier this week, Alex Scacco (WZB) presented ongoing research on intergroup contact and prejudice titled ‘Intergroup Avoidance: Observational and Experimental…
-
Until We Have Won
Our Liberty: South
Africa After
ApartheidGDL director Evan Lieberman’s new book Until We Have Won Our Liberty: South Africa After Apartheid (Princeton UP, 2022) shines…
-
Migration in
Depression-
Era TexasLast week, Professor Leonardo Arriola (UC Berkeley) shared great new research on migration in Depression-era Texas. The results indicate that…
-
Democracy
in South
AfricaThe Journal of Democracy features work by GDL Director Evan Lieberman and GDL affiliate Rorisang Lekalake in their most recent…