In the News

CNBC

Thomas Godwin, professor of practice in accounting at the Dyson School, discusses taxing employees. 

Vox

Mor Naaman, professor at Cornell Tech, and Malte Jung, associate professor of information science, discuss outsourcing writing to AI.

Agence France-Press

Wendong Zhang, assistant professor of applied economics and policy, explains why Canada and Mexico would suffer the most under 25% US tariffs.

Forbes

Guanning Pang, postdoctoral researcher, says “Regardless of eruption frequency, we see large magma bodies beneath many volcanoes. It appears that these magma bodies exist beneath volcanoes over their whole lifetime, not just during an active state.”

Newsweek

Stephen Yale-Loehr, professor of immigration law emeritus, says “With better-crafted EOs, courts may be less likely to issue injunctions. From a legal perspective [the executive orders] may more easily pass judicial scrutiny.”

ABC News

“The basic idea is the power of the purse is given by Article I to Congress. If Congress says you're spending that much money on the federal programs, that's how much is being spent. The president cannot stop it even temporarily,” says Michael Dorf, professor of law.

Time

Menachem Rosensaft, adjunct professor of law, discusses keeping Holocaust survivors' stories alive in this opinion essay.

The Washington Post

Jacob Hamburger, visiting assistant professor of law, discusses the implications losing birthright citizenship could have on the country.

BBC

Alexios Mantzarlis, director of the Security, Trust, and Safety Initiative at Cornell Tech, says “Mark Zuckerberg was clearly pandering to the incoming administration and to Elon Musk.”

The New York Times

Article notes that program course materials were reviewed by Martha Holden, director of the Residential Child Care Project, who found them to be “not sufficient” for new staff.

Grist

Sheila Olmstead, professor at the Brooks School, discusses Trump leaving the Paris Agreement.

Newsweek

“In the first Trump presidency, China's economy was powering along, with an annual growth rate averaging nearly 7 percent. This year and next, China will be hard put to achieve its shrunken growth target of 5 percent,” says Eswar Prasad, senior professor of international trade policy.