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Publication Date: 11/10/2009
“Architecture is an art, but we cannot view it only through an aesthetic lens,” said The New Yorker’s architecture critic Paul Goldberger. “If you think things are simple—black and white—you’ll never...
Topics: Arts, Urban Development
Publication Date: 10/29/2009
As Google continues to fundamentally change the way we read books, watch television, and get news, The New Yorker's Ken Auletta fears for the future of high-quality media. "They lack emotional...
Topics: Media, Journalism
Publication Date: 10/06/2009
The Council of Women World Leaders’ Madeleine K. Albright Women’s Voices at the Aspen Institute Series, in collaboration with the Aspen Institute’s Alma and Joseph Gildenhorn Book Series, hosted...
Topics: Women in Leadership, Jobs
Publication Date: 09/29/2009
"When was the last time we were asked to make a shared sacrifice?" exclaimed Peter G. Peterson, co-founder and chairman emeritus of The Blackstone Group and founder and chairman of the Peter G....
Topics: Finance, Entrepreneurship
Publication Date: 05/13/2009
Azar Nafisi discusses her book Things I’ve Been Silent About: Memories.
Topics: Arts, Culture, Cultural Diplomacy
Publication Date: 05/06/2009
James Mann discusses his book, The Rebellion of Ronald Reagan.
“How far off the reservation did Reagan wander during Reykjavik?” Walter Isaacson asked James Mann as they discussed Mann’s latest book...
Topics: Foreign Policy, Governance
Publication Date: 04/21/2009
“Neither traditional aid nor philanthropy will solve problems of poverty—nor will the market itself,” declared Jacqueline Novogratz, Henry Crown Fellow and founder and CEO of the Acumen Fund....
Topics: Community Development, International Development
Publication Date: 04/01/2009
Lynda Resnick discusses her new book, Rubies in the Orchard.
“In 1986, no one knew what a pomegranate was in America,” exclaimed Lynda Resnick, Aspen Institute Trustee and the businesswoman...
Topics: Business 

