Newsletters

3 Items

Wise Counsel: Paul Volcker (2nd from left), with (l to r) Robert Belfer, James Schlesinger, and Graham Allison.

Photo by Martha Stewart

- Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School Belfer Center Newsletter

Volcker, Holdren Headline International Council Debate of Critical Issues

| Summer 2010

Paul Volcker and John Holdren headlined the annual meeting of the Belfer Center International Council. Volcker, chair of President Obama's Economic Recovery Advisory Board, launched a thought-provoking discussion of "The American Economy, the Global Economy, and the Financial Order." Holdren provided an insightful look into the Administration's policies regarding science and technology.

Educational Distinction: Minos Zombanakis (center) with his family at the Harvard Kennedy School celebration of the Zombanakis professorship.

Rose Lincoln Photo

- Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School Belfer Center Newsletter

New Professorship Named for Minos Zombanakis

| Summer 2010

The Belfer Center launched a new professorship this spring named for Minos A.Zombanakis, chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank's International Advisory Council for Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, a Harvard Kennedy School alum and member of the Belfer Center International Council.

Martin Feldstein (left), a member of the White House Economic Recovery Advisory Board, and Jeffrey Frankel, Harvard Kennedy School professor, offer insight and analysis of the economic crisis during the Center’s International Council meeting in April.

Photo by Martha Stewart

- Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School Belfer Center Newsletter

Economic Experts Suggest Causes, Next Steps for Economy

| Summer 2009

Global leaders are facing the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. Though Lawrence Summers, on leave from Harvard Kennedy School and the Belfer Center to serve as director of the National Economic Council, predicted that the sense of "freefall" may end in the next several months, a recovery is likely to still be some distance away. Belfer Center experts offer their thoughts on where the situation is headed, and what policymakers should do now.