Recent Press Coverage

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  • Atlanta Hit Harder by Historic Inflation Than Other Cities

    April 12, 2022

    Professor Tibor Besedes

    Tibor Besedes, the Mary S. and Richard B. Inman, Jr. Professor in the School of Economics, was quoted in the article, "Atlanta Hit Harder by Historic Inflation Than Other Cities", which aired on April 12, 2022 on CBS46.

    An excerpt:

    Delays with ports, not being able to clear the ships with the lack of truck drivers, and then it’s being compounded by the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the increases of the price of oil,” said Tibor Besedes, professor at Georgia Tech School of Economics.

    Published in: CBS46

  • Moral Outrage in Europe Forcing Decisions That Were Unbelievable a Month Ago, Says Professor

    April 7, 2022

    Robert Bell

    Robert Bell, distinguished professor of the practice in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, was interviewed for the piece, 'Moral Outrage in Europe Forcing Decisions That Were Unbelievable a Month Ago, Says Professor', which aired on April 7, 2022 on CNBC.

    An excerpt:

    Well, I think the trend line is good here. Its not going to happen overnight but its clear that there's a sensitivity and a sense of moral outrage in Europe that is forcing decisions that were unbelievable just a month ago.

    Published in: Moral Outrage in Europe Forcing Decisions That Were Unbelievable a Month Ago, Says Professor

  • Putin's Great Hero is Ivan the Terrible (GT Login Required)

    April 3, 2022

    Dina Khapaeva, professor of Russian

    Dina Khapaeva, professor and director of the Russian program in the School of Modern Languages, was interviewed in the article "Putin's Great Hero is Ivan the Terrible" by CE Noticias Financieras English on April 3, 2022.

    An excerpt:

    What Putin wants is to turn back the clock, he wants to go back to a society where democracy as a social regime did not exist. It's not just about political democracy or elections, it's the idea that people should be prisoners, not have freedoms, not be free to change their professions, to move. It is the idea of going back to serfdom in a very deep way.

    Access the full interview using a GT login.

    Published in: CE Noticias Financieras English

  • ‘The War Never Left’ a Conversation With Ilya Kaminsky About Memory, Viral Poetry, and the Tragedy of Ukraine.

    March 28, 2022

    Ilya Kaminsky

    Ilya Kaminsky, a professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was featured in the article, 'The War Never Left’ a Conversation With Ilya Kaminsky About Memory, Viral Poetry, and the Tragedy of Ukraine', posted on March 15, 2022 in New York Magazine.

    An excerpt:

    Four years before the country’s collapse — it is the era of Gorbachev’s prohibition reforms. Alcohol is impossible to find in the USSR, though I am too young to care. As I bike by Rodina, someone in the line of drunks is shouting angrily about Metcheny Mikhail — their name for Gorbachev, because of the enormous birthmark on his forehead — Marked Mikhail.

    Published in: New York Magazine

  • Why Are Black Men Just Two Percent of American Public School Teachers?

    March 25, 2022

    Joycelyn Wilson

    Joycelyn Wilson, an assistant professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was interviewed for the piece, 'Why Are Black Men Just Two Percent of American Public School Teachers?', posted on March 25, 2022 on Revolt.

    An excerpt:

    One of the things that happened during Brown vs. Board of Education is that black teachers and black leadership was removed from the schools and were replaced with white teachers and white leadership.

    Published in: Revolt

  • Will Summit Provoke Putin?

    March 24, 2022

    Robert Bell

    Robert Bell, distinguished professor of the practice in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, appeared on "Arnab Goswami on The Debate" on March 24. The show appeared on Republic World.

    Where this [situation] should go is the direction the United Nations called for... an immediate ceasefire coupled with the beginnings of a complete withdrawal of Russian forces, back to their start lines on Feb. 24. That's also the position that the 30 heads of state of NATO endorsed this morning, meeting in Brussels.

    Published in: Will Summit Provoke Putin?

  • Ex-Supreme Allied Commander of NATO Forces Discusses the State of War in Ukraine

    March 22, 2022

    Gen. Philip Breedlove

    Gen. Philip Breedlove, distinguished professor of the practice in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, was interviewed for the piece, 'Ex-Supreme Allied Commander of NATO Forces Discusses the State of War in Ukraine', posted March 22, 2022 on NPR.org.

    An excerpt:

    Well, I think that the way they use this particular missile in this conflict - it really is just that they're trying to make a statement. They've had no real tactical effect on the battlefield that any other missile - you know, we have sort of stopped tracking it, but we're well over 900 missiles fired so far in this conflict. And one more really is not a tactical effect on the battlefield. I think they're just trying to get the world's attention that we're willing to escalate this business here.

    Published in: Ex-Supreme Allied Commander of NATO Forces Discusses the State of War in Ukraine

  • The Rise of Citational Justice: How Scholars are Making References Fairer

    March 22, 2022

    Cassidy Sugimoto

    Cassidy Sugimoto, Tom and Marie Patton School Chair in the School of Public Policy, was quoted in a piece 'The Rise of Citational Justice: How Scholars are Making References Fairer.' The article was published by Nature.

    An excerpt:

    “To me, citational justice isn’t only about justice,” Sugimoto says. “It’s about doing robust, rigorous science, where you are truly exploring all the potential areas of research and what has been conducted before to accelerate the progress of science.”

    Published in: The Rise of Citational Justice: How Scholars are Making References Fairer

  • Suspending Gas Tax: What it Means for Georgians

    March 22, 2022

    Professor Tibor Besedes

    Tibor Besedes, the Mary S. and Richard B. Inman, Jr. Professor of Economics, was interviewed for the segment "Suspending Gas Tax: What it Means for Georgians" on WSAV-TV. It aired on March 18, 2022.

    An excerpt:

    "Deliveries like Amazon, UPS, all of those things will likely start to become expensive because prices have increased so much in such a short period of time."

    Published in: WSAV-TV

  • Augusta Manufacturer Largest Source of CO2 in Georgia, Emissions Tracker Reports

    March 17, 2022

    Marilyn Brown

    Margaret E. Kosal, an associate professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, was interviewed for the piece, 'Augusta Manufacturer Largest Source of CO2 in Georgia, Emissions Tracker Reports' published on March 17, 2022 on The Augusta Chronicle.

    An excerpt:

    "Our business development successes in the clean tech areas are going to grow jobs and grow opportunities for Georgians to walk the talk," said Marilyn Brown, Regents' and Brook Byers Professor of Sustainable Systems in the School of Public Policy at Georgia Tech. "I'm really happy about that, it's not as significant a push, though, of course, as it would be to put a price on (carbon)."

    Published in: The Augusta Chronicle

  • Inside the High-Stakes Race to Test the Covid Tests

    March 15, 2022

    Sarah Farmer

    Sarah Farmer, a research scientist at the Georgia Tech Research Institute and the project manager of Georgia Tech’s HomeLab, was quoted in the article, 'Inside the High-Stakes Race to Test the Covid Tests' published March, 15, 2022 in The New York Times.

    Sarah discusses the effort that involves Georgia Tech in evaluating COVID tests.

    An excerpt:

    Researchers also assessed the user-friendliness of each product. “You want to make sure that nothing requires too much force, make sure that it’s easy to grasp, grip,” said Sarah Farmer, managing director of Georgia Tech’s HomeLab. “Let’s streamline it where possible, cut down steps where possible.”

    Published in: The New York Times

  • Have Chinese Spies Infiltrated American Campuses?

    March 14, 2022

    John Krige

    John Krige, Kranzberg Professor Emeritus in the School of History and Sociology, was quoted in the article "Have Chinese Spies Infiltrated American Campuses?" on March 14, 2022, in The New Yorker.

    An excerpt:

    With the money came unprecedented secrecy regulations and loyalty oaths. John Krige, a historian of science and technology, told me that academics accepted the compromise: “They were willing to sacrifice a certain amount of freedom to publish as long as the spigot was open.”

    Published in: The New Yorker

  • Russia-Ukraine War: Is This World's First Hybrid War?

    March 12, 2022

    Dr. Nadiya Kostyuk

    Nadiya Kostyuk, an assistant professor in the School of Public Policy, was featured in the piece, 'Russia-Ukraine War: Is This World's First Hybrid War? ', posted on by India Today on Twitter.

    An excerpt:

    So I think over the last few decades how wars have been fought have been effected by modern technology an cyber technology is one of these modern technologies.

    Published in: India Today

  • Georgia Tech Grad and Professor Named to U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame

    March 11, 2022

    Sandra Magnus

    Sandra Magnus, a distinguished professor of the practice in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, was featured in the article, 'Georgia Tech Grad and Professor Named to U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame', published on March 11, 2022 on 11Alive.com.

    An excerpt:

    In 1996, Magnus was both selected as an engineer for astronaut candidacy by NASA and celebrated receiving her doctoral degree in Materials Science and Engineering from Tech. She launched aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis in 2002 and flew to the International Space Station in 2008. She lived on board the space station for four and a half months. 

    Published in: 11Alive

  • Reporter’s Notebook: Georgia Tech Grad Elected to U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame

    March 10, 2022

    Sandra Magnus

    Sandra Magnus, a distinguished professor of the practice in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, was featured in the article, 'Reporter’s Notebook: Georgia Tech Grad Elected to U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame', published on March 10, 2022 on Saporta Report.

    An excerpt:

    Sandra “Sandy” Magnus is to join a rarefied group of 101 astronauts to be inducted, according to a statement from Georgia Tech. The ceremony at the Kennedy Space Center, in Cape Canaveral, Fla., is set for June.

    Published in: Saporta Report

  • At Sweltering Southwest Georgia Military Bases, Pioneering a Cleaner Cooling System

    March 9, 2022

    Marilyn Brown

    Marilyn Brown, a Regents' and Brook Byers professor in the School of Public Policy, was mentioned in the article, 'At Sweltering Southwest Georgia Military Bases, Pioneering a Cleaner Cooling System', posted March 9, 2022 on WABE.

    An excerpt:

    “Usually if you’ve got a facility already occupied, you don’t have the luxury of ripping up the infrastructure to put in the pipes needed,” she said.

    Published in: WABE

  • Anti-Feminist Political Novice: South Korea's New President Yoon

    March 9, 2022

    Keung Yoon Bae

    Keung Yoon Bae, an assistant professor in the School of Modern Languages, was interviewed for the article, 'Anti-Feminist Political Novice: South Korea's New President Yoon', posted on March 9, 2022 on France24.com.

    An excerpt:

    This suggests "he and his spouse are more than willing to engage in retaliatory legal investigations into political opponents," Keung Yoon Bae, a Korean studies professor at Georgia Institute of Technology, told AFP.

    Published in: France24.com

  • “The Poem Is a Warning”

    March 8, 2022

    Ilya Kaminsky

    Ilya Kaminsky, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was featured in the article, '“The Poem Is a Warning”', posted on March 4, 2022 on Slate.

    An excerpt:

    Ilya Kaminsky: “Deaf Republic” opens when a deaf boy is shot by a soldier from an invading army in a public square. The whole community decides to protest this murder by refusing to hear the authorities. The townspeople coordinate with each other by sign language. In the midst of this violence, people still fall in love, laugh, make children.

    Published in: Slate

  • Metro Atlanta Drivers Can Expect Higher Gas Prices After Biden Announces Ban on Russian Oil Imports

    March 8, 2022

    Tibor Besedes

    Tibor Besedes, the Mary S. and Richard B. Inman, Jr. professor in the School of Economics, was interviewed for the piece, 'Metro Atlanta Drivers Can Expect Higher Gas Prices After Biden Announces Ban on Russian Oil Imports' which aired on CBS46 on March 8, 2022.

    An excerpt:

    “For this to truly be effective, to cut off Russia from the global oil and natural gas market, Europe would really need to join in because Europe relies on like 40% of energy supply from Russia,” Besedes said.

    Published in: CBS46

  • Fears of Larger Russian Cyber Attacks Loom

    March 5, 2022

    Dr. Nadiya Kostyuk

    Nadiya Kostyuk, an assistant professor in the School of Public Policy, was interviewed for the article, 'Fears of Larger Russian Cyber Attacks Loom', broadcast on March 5, 2022 on MSNBC.

    An excerpt:

    Russia has yet to use the full extent of its cyber capabilities to launch a cyber attack against Ukraine amid its invasion. Cyber security experts are trying to figure out why. Georgia Institute of Technology assistant professor Dr. Nadiya Kostyuk joined American Voices to discuss. She has been analyzing Russian cyber operations in Ukraine for the past eight years. 

    Published in: MSNBC

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