A foundation for a stronger democracy
- Andrew Carnegie Fellows28 Scholars to Research Political Polarization with Support from Carnegie Corporation of New York
The Corporation is committing up to $18 million over the next three years to develop a body of research around political polarization.
- Andrew Carnegie FellowsWhy Has the United States Become So Polarized?
Many of us make assumptions about polarization, but how sure are we that we are right? The 2024 Andrew Carnegie Fellows are developing a body of research around its causes and implications.
Andrew Carnegie Fellows - Special ProjectsThe Secret Life of Librarians
The Corporation’s The Secret Life of Librarians series explores the little known stories of the 2024 I Love My Librarian honorees and their contributions as civic leaders who are improving lives and drawing communities together.
- ReadHow Russian Studies Is Grappling with the War in Ukraine
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has led to the most significant crisis in Russian studies since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Here’s what can be done about it.
Emerging Global OrderScholarship & Policy - EducationMedia Literacy for Students in a Digital Age
Whether you call it digital, information, news, visual, or media literacy — it is vital for civic engagement and democracy
CitizenshipFuture of Learning & Work - NEWSTen Community-Based Collaboratives Recognized as Exemplars in Education with Grants from Carnegie Corporation of New York
The Corporation will provide $6 million annually for research that seeks to understand how and why our society has become so polarized and how we can strengthen the forces of cohesion to strengthen our democracy. Fellows will be announced in spring 2024
- DemocracyHealthy Democracies Need to Invest in Civic Education. Here’s How States Can Help
A new Corporation report highlights the need for state-level policies that expand and improve K–12 civic learning and provides examples of how coalition building has been used to advance more robust policies in a growing number of states
Citizenship
The International Issue of the Corporation’s flagship publication examines a range of complex topics critical to global security, from U.S.-China relations to the personal implications of nuclear policy.
- From the PresidentWelcome to the International Issue of the Carnegie Reporter
In her introduction to the issue, Dame Louise Richardson writes about the role of knowledge and understanding in international security and the importance of removing barriers between scholarship and policymaking
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Scholarship & Policy - Emerging Global OrderForeign Policy Begins at Home
To deter would-be foes and provide security to friends and allies, president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations' Richard Haass argues Americans must be able to come together across partisan divides
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Emerging Global Order - African AcademicsLocal Problems, Local Expertise: Addressing Urban Accessibility and Mobility Issues in South Africa
With Corporation support, Hazminei Tsitsi Tamuka Moyo considers how South African cities can address urban accessibility and mobility issues and the marginalizing consequences of past city planning
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023African Academics - Scholarship & PolicyCan Knowledge Make the World More Secure?
Deana Arsenian reflects on the ways the Corporation’s International Program advances knowledge and understanding of issues, regions, and countries as an essential — if imperfect — element of its efforts to reduce global threats and promote cooperative approaches to security challenges
Carnegie Reporter Fall 2023Emerging Global OrderScholarship & Policy