Immigration to the United States, say Ran Abramitzky and Leah Boustan, is more novel than short story: It takes decades for new immigrants to catch up economically. But their kids on average thrive economically and have higher rates of upward mobility than American-born kids. Abramitzky and Boustan talk about their book Streets of Gold with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Using an extraordinary data set of millions of Americans, Boustan and Abramitzky find that today's immigrants and their children are surprisingly similar to yesterday's.
Omer Moav on the Emergence of the State
Paul Bloom on Psych, Psychology, and the Human Mind
Marco Ramos on Misunderstanding Mental Illness
Adam Mastroianni on Peer Review and the Academic Kitchen
Sam Harris on Meditation, Mindfulness, and Morality
Vinay Prasad on Pharmaceuticals, the FDA, and the Death of Duty
Dwayne Betts on Beauty, Prison, and Redaction
Tiffany Jenkins on Plunder, Museums, and Marbles
Ian Leslie on Being Human in the Age of AI
Hannah Ritchie on Eating Local
Judge Glock on Zoning and Local Government
Arnold Kling on Twitter, FTX, and ChatGPT
Monica Guzman on Curiosity and Conversation in Contentious Times
Patrick House on Consciousness
Annie Duke on the Power of Quitting
Johnathan Bi on Mimesis and René Girard
Agnes Callard on Meaning, the Human Quest, and the Aims of Education
Jessica Todd Harper on Beauty, Family, and Photography
Michael Munger on Industrial Policy
Ryan Holiday on Discipline Is Destiny
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