December 2025
Equality Now Calls for Urgent Action as Backlash Against Women’s Rights Intensifies
EIN Presswire, December 30, 2025
Equality Now, where institute advisory board member S. Mona Sinha '93 is global executive director, warns of a growing global backlash against women’s and girls’ rights. The policy brief documents how coordinated anti-gender movements, regressive laws, and attacks on multilateral institutions are rolling back decades of legal progress — and calls on governments to act now to defend gender equality, human rights, and civil society worldwide.
2025 Moskowitz Prize Awarded to Research on Blended Finance for Sustainability Projects
Kellogg Northwestern, December 17, 2025
Columbia Business School Professor Geoffrey Heal is a co-author of the 2025 Moskowitz Prize–winning paper “Blended Finance,” which examines how development finance institutions use concessional capital to attract private investment into high-impact sustainability projects. The research analyzes deal-level data to show how risk and expected social impact shape the design of blended finance — offering practical insights for scaling climate, energy, and development investments.
2025 Nonprofit Power Players
Politics NY, December 3, 2025
Congratulations to Phoebe Boyer '93, president and CEO of Children’s Aid, on being named one of 2025’s Nonprofit Power Players. For ten years, Boyer has strengthened essential health, education, and family support systems for New York City’s children — and championed the role nonprofits play in advancing opportunity and equity. Her leadership continues to shape a stronger, more compassionate city for all.
November 2025
Poets&Quants’s MBA Program Of The Year: Columbia Business School
Poets&Quants, November 25, 2025
Columbia Business School has been named Poets & Quants’s 2025 MBA Program of the Year for its bold, future-focused transformation — especially its groundbreaking leadership in AI and climate. While other schools are still debating how to integrate AI, CBS has reorganized its curriculum, pedagogy, and operations around it. At the core is CAiSEY, a voice-based AI learning platform created by Professor Dan Wang, now used by thousands of students to deepen case preparation and improve accessibility for diverse learning styles.
CBS’s innovation extends far beyond AI. The Climate Pathway — led by Professor Bruce Usher — is meeting extraordinary student demand for courses in climate risk, finance, technology, and energy systems. As Dean Costis Maglaras put it: “Addressing the climate challenge is central in our students’ minds.” From pioneering AI-powered learning to expanding climate and technology pathways, CBS is reshaping what a modern business education can be.
Beyond Pledges: Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty Provides a Roadmap for Climate Investors
Impact Alpha, November 19, 2025
Co-written by Erika Karp ’91, president and partner at Green Alpha Investments, this piece argues that climate investors need more than net zero pledges—they need a roadmap. The authors highlight the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty as a practical framework for phasing out fossil fuels, scaling clean energy, and aligning capital with real-world decarbonization. Their message is clear: investors have a critical role to play in accelerating a fair, fast, and orderly transition.
At UVA’s Darden School, Using AI Isn’t Cheating. It’s Part of the Assignment
UVA Today, November 17, 2025
Darden School of Business is taking a bold approach to AI in the classroom — and it’s powered by tech developed at CBS. Students in the core Strategy course now use CAiSEY, the AI discussion agent created by CBS Professor Dan Wang, to practice case analysis through adaptive, voice-to-voice conversations. Instead of banning AI, Darden is requiring it, arguing that future business leaders need to know how to think with these tools.
The 2025 Women Power 100
City and State, November 17, 2025
Congratulations to Phoebe Boyer '93, president and CEO of Children’s Aid, for once again being included in this list of the top 100 remarkable women leaders who run the state of New York. Over the last decade, Boyer has strengthened academic, health, and community programs that support children and families living in poverty. Under her leadership, the organization launched the new podcast "Every Step of the Way," secured a major grant from the Visa Foundation, and continued to push for federal reforms through the Nonprofit Sector Strength and Partnership Act, which aims to expand nonprofits’ ability to shape policy.
Retailers Confront Tariff Whiplash: CBS’s “Next Frontier in Retail” Discussion Focuses on Resilient, Regenerative Supply Chains
Columbia Business School, November 14, 2025
At this CBS event — co-hosted by the Green Business Club, Retail & Luxury Goods Club, and the Tamer Institute — Target’s Maithili Shenoy unpacked how retailers are navigating 145 percent tariff swings, supplier diversification, and the rising “value of resilience." Moderated by Professor Brett House, the discussion explored Shenoy’s push toward “regenerative retail” — linking operational excellence with sustainability. Professor Nicole DeHoratius also highlighted CBS’s new Sustainable Operations Initiative, preparing leaders for this next frontier.
Sowing Seeds of Community Care at Harlem’s Saint Nicholas Miracle Garden
Columbia Neighbors, November 6, 2025
Founded by Judi Desire, the Uptown & Boogie Healthy Project is revitalizing the Saint Nicholas Miracle Garden, transforming an abandoned lot into a hub for food justice, sustainability, and intergenerational learning in Harlem. This past summer, CBS staff joined Desire and her team during the School's "Community Service Day," helping restore and refresh the space. The garden’s story is a testament to how local leadership, cultural roots, and community partnerships can grow lasting change.
October 2025
New York’s Next Mayor Must Put Heads Together
Vital City, October 29, 2025
Fifty years after New York City’s fiscal crisis, the city once again faces defining choices — and a call to rediscover the collaborative spirit that saved it in 1975. From the Municipal Assistance Corporation’s public–private partnership to today’s creative alliances in climate tech, infrastructure, and housing, the lesson endures: New York thrives when business, government, and communities work together.
As voters head to the polls, Georgia Levenson Keohane, CEO of the Soros Economic Development Fund at the Open Society Foundations and former adjunct professor, writes that the city’s future depends not on division, but on shared resolve and imagination.
This Simple Device is Making Maternal Health More Accessible in Kenya
Global Citizen, October 16, 2025
Ilara Health is revolutionizing maternal care in Kenya by equipping remote clinics with handheld ultrasound devices and real-time tele-sonography support. The Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member, founded by Emilian Popa ’10, is closing the gap between rural patients and urban specialists — helping expectant mothers access safe, timely diagnostics and better outcomes.
Trimtab’s Unapologetic Pitch to Wealthy Families Seeking Outperformance – on Impact
Impact Alpha, October 14, 2025
Trimtab Impact is redefining what it means to invest with purpose. Founded by Caleb Ballou ’16 and Trace Welch ’17, the new impact-first holding company has raised over $60M from seven wealthy families to pursue one goal: maximize impact, not profits.
By prioritizing catalytic, risk-tolerant capital over market-rate returns, Trimtab aims to reshape the financial system itself — proving that fiduciary duty can be rooted in impact as much as in return.
Columbia Business School Professor Helps Corrections Officers Harness Stress for Well-Being
Columbia Business School, October 13, 2025
Professor Modupe Akinola led stress management workshops for staff at California State Prison, Sacramento, where she extended her research on mindfulness and resilience to those working in high-pressure environments.
Supported by the Bernstein Center for Leadership and Ethics and the Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change, this initiative complements the Tamer Institute's ReEntry Acceleration Program (REAP) — expanding impact beyond incarcerated individuals to the correctional staff who support them every day. Together, these efforts take a holistic approach to well-being and leadership across the justice system.
How AI Is Changing the Way Students Learn
Columbia Business School, October 10, 2025
CAiSEY (Classroom Artificial Intelligence Studio for Engaging You), an AI-based, voice-powered discussion tool created by Professor Dan Wang alongside CBS alumni Jill Cohen ‘20 and Johnny Lee ‘23, allows students to debate case studies with an AI partner before class. By giving students a dialogue practice tool, Wang found that classroom discussions became richer, more creative, and more inclusive — especially for learners who engage better through speaking rather than writing.
Hard to Abate, Impossible to Ignore: How Green Steel and Low-Carbon Cement Are Cleaning Up Heavy Industry
Columbia Business School, October 10, 2025
One panel in Columbia Business School’s Climate Week lineup convened experts and practitioners from heavy industry to share what’s working as they push forward toward decarbonization. The panel discussion, featuring Nick Ellis (Amazon Climate Pledge Fund), Simon Brandler (Brimstone), Maria Persson Gulda (Stegra), Cornelius Pieper (BCG), and moderated by Professor Gernot Wagner, reflected the larger mission of CBS’s Climate Knowledge Initiative (CKI). This event was co-presented by the Green Business Club and Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change at Columbia Business School and Columbia Climate School.
CBS Climate Week Takeaways: Climate Risk Outspeeds Pace of Change, But Innovations Offer Hope
Columbia Business School, October 10, 2025
The Tamer Institute was proud to host a week of programming for the Columbia Business School community during Climate Week NYC 2025. To promote climate impact across various industries, we partnered with peer clubs at CBS and schools across campus, and the message was clear: climate risks are accelerating, finance is falling behind, and AI’s energy appetite looms large. But pragmatic innovation, price parity, and partnerships may be enough to bend the curve.
Impact Investing Needs to Rediscover Its Catalytic Edge
Impact Alpha, October 8, 2025
Fifteen years after its founding, impact investing is at a crossroads. Once defined by its willingness to take bold risks, much of the field has shifted toward market-rate returns. In this piece, Leah Pedersen '10, senior director at Convergence Blended Finance Accelerator, argues that investors must rediscover their catalytic edge — embracing flexibility, blended finance, and intentional risk-taking to truly mobilize the capital needed for sustainable development.
September 2025
On Climate Change, Capital Must Follow Africa’s Lead
Project Syndicate, September 29, 2025
With abundant solar potential and a rapidly growing population, Africa stands at the forefront of a green transition that could drive sustainable, inclusive growth. Georgia Levenson Keohane, CEO of the Soros Economic Development Fund at the Open Society Foundations and former adjunct professor, writes that unlocking this future, however, will require closing a $2.8 trillion financing gap and mobilizing global capital to support African-led climate solutions.
Plantd Raises $22M to Scale Carbon-Negative Materials and Transform Waste Stream Into New Market Growth
yahoo! Finance, September 29, 2025
Plantd just raised $22M to scale its carbon removal efforts — and it’s another sign that the market for high-integrity climate solutions is growing fast. Plantd is a Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member founded by Josh Dorfman, Ian Harsey, Nathan Silvernail, and Huade Tan, ’13SEAS.
There's No Way We Can Afford $100,000: Small Firms Scramble Over H-1B Visa Fees
BBC, September 25, 2025
In a recent BBC feature on the proposed $100,000 H-1B visa fee, Professor Dan Wang noted that such policies don’t actually boost opportunities for US workers. Instead, they risk pushing companies to offshore jobs and weakening America’s edge in entrepreneurship and innovation.
NYC's Changing Neighborhood Names; 'Sixties Surreal' at the Whitney; Managing Homeowner Climate Risks; Can Climate Comedy Help Fight Doomerism?
WNYC, September 24, 2025
Can laughter fight climate doom? This feature explores how Tamer Fund for Social Venture portfolio member Climate Town, founded by Rollie Williams, '21CS, is a clever blend of comedy and climate insight helping counter misinformation and spark hope in the climate movement.
AXA IM Alts Invests Into US Nature-Based Solutions Company, Pantheon Regeneration PBC and Their First Project to Restore Damaged Peatlands
AXA Investment Managers, September 12, 2025
Pantheon Regeneration PBC has secured investment from AXA IM Alts to restore 14,500 acres of damaged US peatlands — boosting carbon storage, biodiversity, and wildfire resilience. Congratulations to Beth Richtman ’07, co-founder and COO, for leading this groundbreaking nature-based solutions effort.
America’s Bipartisan Bright Spot
Project Syndicate, September 1, 2025
Georgia Levenson Keohane, CEO of the Soros Economic Development Fund at the Open Society Foundations and former adjunct professor, writes that there is growing bipartisan support in the United States for expanding employee ownership as a way to promote economic inclusion and give workers a greater stake in the nation’s prosperity.
August 2025
AfDB's Investment Anchors First Close of $118 Million for Africa's Leading Green Infrastructure Initiative
Green Building Africa, August 17, 2025
The Alliance for Green Infrastructure in Africa Project Development Fund (AGIA-PD), a fund managed by Africa50, has reached its first close at $118 — a key milestone in driving green infrastructure development across the continent.
“The Soros Economic Development Fund (SEDF) is proud to support the Alliance for Green Infrastructure in Africa, a critically important Africa-led partnership to catalyze transformative green infrastructure projects that enhance climate resilience, accelerate a just energy transition, and drive inclusive, sustainable development across the continent," said Georgia Levenson Keohane — CEO of the Soros Economic Development Fund at the Open Society Foundations and former adjunct professor.
AGIA-PD is also supported by the Three Cairns Group through its partner, The African Climate Foundation. “The lack of bankable projects remains a persistent barrier to scaling clean energy and climate-resilient infrastructure across Africa,” commented Mark Gallogly '86, co-founder of Three Cairns Group, a mission-driven investment and philanthropic firm focused on the climate crisis.
How Peach & Lily and Visit.org Leveraged Partnerships to Grow
Inc., August 14, 2025
In this podcast episode, Michal Alter, '13SIPA, founder of Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member Visit.org, discussed growing a startup, developing and maintaining partnerships, and pivoting.
July 2025
Bridging Business, Engineering, and Climate Tech
Columbia Business School Magazine, July 23, 2025
The innovative Climate Tech course — designed by Professors Bruce Usher, Alan West, and Dave Kirkpatrick — brings MBA and engineering students together with real VC funds to evaluate breakthrough climate technologies for both commercial viability and climate impact. The experiential program builds deep expertise at the intersection of business, engineering, and climate innovation.
Europe’s Quiet Digital Health Revolution: 6 Experts’ Views
Forbes, July 23, 2025
Europe’s digital health revolution is quietly reshaping care — from AI diagnostics to cross-border innovation. Sylvana Q. Sinha, '04LAW, founder of Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member Praava Health, shares six expert insights on what’s working, what’s next, and why equity still matters.
How Climate Is Reshaping Real Estate
Columbia Business School, July 16, 2025
At the 2025 Climate Business and Investment Conference, experts explored how rising temperatures, severe storms, and shifting regulations are reshaping the way we build, invest, and live.
Climate Connections
Columbia Business School, July 15, 2025
The Climate Practitioners Network connects alumni across fields to invest in solutions, mentor students, and share what works.
Closing the Climate Knowledge Gap
Columbia Business School, July 15, 2025
By pairing research with compelling media, Columbia Business School's Climate Knowledge Initiative is helping climate innovations reach the boardroom and beyond.
The New Climate Imperative
Columbia Business School, July 15, 2025
In a series of op-eds for Earth Day 2025, Columbia Business School Professors Bruce Usher, Eric Johnson, Gernot Wagner, and Conor Walsh explain why educators, companies, and business leaders must adapt or fall behind.
Trailblazers of the Climate Economy
Columbia Business School, July 15, 2025
Columbia Business School entrepreneurs are charting new territory in climate innovation. These pioneers are forging bold solutions, driving growth, scaling impact, and reshaping the path to a sustainable future.
The Longevity Revolution Is Coming — Will It Include You?
Forbes, July 14, 2025
Sylvana Q. Sinha, '04LAW, founder of Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member Praava Health, spotlights how annual basic health checkups could boost global life expectancy by up to seven years.
Event Recap: Columbia Send-Off Reception for Incoming Students from Greece Featuring a Talk by Professor Bruce Usher
Columbia Global Centers, July 2, 2025
Over the summer, Columbia Global Center in Athens, in collaboration with the Columbia Alumni of Greece, organized a send-off reception to welcome the newest students from Greece joining Columbia University this fall. Held at the Tsakos Energy Navigation headquarters in southern Athens, the event brought together incoming students, alumni, and friends of the University, celebrating the start of their Columbia journey. Professor Bruce Usher provided an overview of the evolving landscape around climate change.
June 2025
Philanthropists Find New Ways to Give in the Face of Trump’s Opposition
Financial Times, June 27, 2025
CBS adjunct professor and Tamer Institute advisory board member Melissa Berman warns that many philanthropists are preemptively scaling back on DEI and climate work to stay in line with the Trump administration — not by law, but by fear. “Voluntary self-censorship is already happening,” she says.
Next Challenge for Impact Investors: Shaping Markets to Let Capital Flow Where It’s Needed Most
ImpactAlpha, June 25, 2025
ImpactAlpha argues that the next frontier for impact investing is “market‑shaping” — not just funding individual deals, but building enduring systems that channel capital where it’s needed most. Returning adjunct professor at Columbia Business School Antony Bugg‑Levine writes that it's about creating permanent pathways for investment to flow into underserved communities and sectors, turning isolated efforts into sustainable, systemic change.
May 2025
Business School Teaching Case Study: Who Pays for Cutting Carbon Out of Making Cement?
Financial Times, May 19, 2025
The cement industry emits eight percent of global CO₂ — and startups like Brimstone and Sublime aim to change that with cleaner tech. Professor Gernot Wagner writes that high costs and slow adoption remain big hurdles.
The Green Key to Germany’s Economic Recovery
Project Syndicate, May 16, 2025
Germany’s economic comeback depends on cheap, clean power. Professor Gernot Wagner argues that affordable green energy is key to boosting industry and driving sustainable growth.
Calvert Impact’s Market-shaping Strategy for the Future of Impact
ImpactAlpha, May 15, 2025
Calvert Impact’s CEO Jennifer Pryce '00 calls on impact investors to shift from just doing deals to shaping markets. Instead of building standalone funds, she urges creating durable institutions that steer flexible capital, tools, and partnerships toward underserved communities — moving the needle on systemic change faster and more effectively.
CBS ClimateCAP Fellows: Innovating Solutions for a Sustainable Future
Columbia Business School, May 14, 2025
Three Columbia Business School students are leveraging their MBA experience to tackle climate challenges — designing circular supply chains, transforming catastrophe bonds, and creating scalable climate investment vehicles.
Climate Change Is Both Predictable and Unpredictable. We Don't Need Certainty to Know It's a Crisis
Salon, May 1, 2025
Professor Gernot Wagner explains why embracing uncertainty should spur faster, bolder climate action.
April 2025
The New Nuclear: How TerraPower Is Powering the Future of Clean Energy
Columbia Business School, April 30, 2025
Chris Levesque, president and CEO of TerraPower, explains how next-generation reactors and innovative energy storage are reshaping nuclear energy's role in the global transition to sustainability.
To Help Scale Climate Finance, MDBs Must Seek Replicable Leverage
OPEC Fund Quarterly, Spring 2025
Blended finance is key to tackling climate change, writes Professor Gernot Wagner on how to scale climate finance. Combining public and private funds can unlock scalable climate solutions, and simple, replicable models are the way forward.
The Global Renewable Energy Boom Can’t Be Stopped — Not Even by US Politics
Columbia Business School, April 28, 2025
Despite political shifts in Washington, the renewable energy transition is accelerating worldwide. Columbia Business School’s Conor Walsh explains why the economics of clean energy have already won — and what it means for the future.
Why Most Americans Get Sustainability Wrong — and How to Fix It
Columbia Business School, April 28, 2025
Columbia Business School Professor Eric Johnson explains the surprising knowledge gap for people trying to reduce their carbon footprint — and what companies and consumers can do about it.
Climate Change Must Be Core to Business Education
Columbia Business School, April 28, 2025
Climate change is reshaping global markets — and business schools must adapt. Professor Bruce Usher explains why climate literacy is critical for future business leaders and how MBA programs are evolving to meet this challenge.
Climate and National Security: Bridging the Divide in Energy Policy
Columbia Business School, April 25, 2025
During Columbia Business School’s Earth Week, Professors David Schizer and Gernot Wagner explored how climate and national security priorities can accelerate the transition to clean energy.
Inside the Climate Innovations Reshaping Our Buildings
Fast Company, April 22, 2025
Plantd co-founder Josh Dorfman, writes about what fast-growing companies like the Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member (among others), reveal about the future of decarbonization.
Why Climate Finance Is Key To Fighting Climate Change
Columbia Climate School: State of the Planet, April 16, 2025
Climate finance is key to solving the climate crisis — but funding isn’t flowing where it’s needed most. Columbia University is tackling this with a new MS in climate finance, launching in fall 2025, aiming to train leaders to unlock capital for global solutions. Professor Bruce Usher highlights the challenge: “There’s enough money — it’s just not going to the right places.”
Invest In Asia’s Best-Kept Secret: Bangladesh’s Health Care Boom
Forbes, April 14, 2025
Bangladesh’s health care sector is experiencing rapid growth, driven by a burgeoning middle class and increasing demand for quality services. Sylvana Q. Sinha, '04LAW, founder of Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member Praava Health, is at the forefront of this transformation, leading efforts to modernize the industry. Her work emphasizes the importance of investing in health care to support the nation's economic development and improve patient outcomes.
The God Box
How We Survive Podcast, April 9, 2025
In this podcast on climate solutions, Professor Bruce Usher weighs in on the history of ESG investing.
Paving the Way to Fusion Energy
Columbia Business School, April 1, 2025
In a conversation with Professor Bruce Usher, Bob Mumgaard, CEO of Commonwealth Fusion Systems, laid out three key insights into the opportunities and challenges facing the clean energy transition.
March 2025
The 2025 Queens Power 100
City & State, March 17, 2025
Ben Thomases '03, executive director of Queens Community House, is included in this list of top community leaders in Queens. Queens Community House is one of the borough's largest nonprofits, with 40 sites boroughwide.
Meet the MBA Class of 2026: Vasudha Mathur, Columbia Business School
Poets&Quants, March 14, 2025
"One of the key reasons I chose Columbia Business School was its commitment to building responsible businesses and leaders. Personally, I am interested in how consumer products businesses can integrate climate-friendly practices that are financially viable. Columbia stands out as one of the few schools with a robust curriculum and faculty focused on climate and business, making it a core pillar of its approach to the future. This emphasis extends beyond environmental sustainability to all areas of business responsibility, aligning perfectly with my goals of driving positive change through business," says Vasudha Mathur '26.
Meet the MBA Class of 2026: Yusuke Mizui, Columbia Business School
Poets&Quants, March 14, 2025
Yusuke Mizui '26 says that Professor Bruce Usher’s Impact Investing course is one of the classes he's most excited to take at CBS.
Meet the MBA Class of 2026: Josue Silva, Columbia Business School
Poets&Quants, March 14, 2025
"As someone who aims to build a business, I am excited to take classes in the VC and entrepreneurship space, including Investing in Social Ventures and Launch Your Startup," says Josue Silva '26, on how the curriculum was a key component in choosing CBS.
Meet the MBA Class of 2026: Misan Bolorunfe, Columbia Business School
Poets&Quants, March 14, 2025
Misan Bolorunfe '26 explains that a key reason they chose CBS was because of "its hands-on commitment to social impact, which aligns perfectly with my ambitions. Programs like those offered by the Tamer Institute and the Bernstein Center provide students with the resources to explore where profitability meets purpose. This focus resonates deeply with me, as I’m passionate about using business as a tool for positive change, and CBS offers practical ways to deepen that commitment."
Meet the MBA Class of 2026: Tiffany Bauman, Columbia Business School
Poets&Quants, March 14, 2025
"The opportunity I’m most excited about is being selected as a Three Cairns Fellow through the Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change. This fellowship focuses on projects at the intersection of climate change and business and aligns well with my passion for sustainability and creating impact. My team will spend the next year evaluating the potential of geothermal energy as a renewable alternative," says Tiffany Bauman '26, on what program excites them the most at CBS.
Net Impact Announces the 2024 Chapter of the Year Winners
Net Impact, March 6, 2025
Columbia Business School's Social Enterprise Club (SEC) was awarded the Net Impact US Graduate Chapter of the Year award! Led by co-presidents Tadesh Inagaki '25 and Francesca Pipino '25, the club supports 300 MBA student members with a mission to apply their B-school learnings to real-world impact. The chapter collaborates closely with the Tamer Institute to support impactful initiatives, such as the Nonprofit Board Leadership Program (NBLP), where members consult with nonprofits and gain exposure to board service; Pangea Advisors, the School's pro bono international consulting organization; and the LEO Impact Fund, the student-run impact investing fund. The chapter also organizes the annual "Capital for Good Conference," about social innovation, featuring speakers from the New York Green Bank, Mercy Corps, and the US Department of Energy.
Kyndryl Foundation Expands Second-year Funding to 11 Countries to Advance Cybersecurity and AI Skills Development
Kyndryl, March 4, 2025
Justice Through Code (JTC) has received a grant from the Kyndryl Foundation (the philanthropic arm of Kyndryl), to expand "The Flagship," a 10-month software engineering and professional development program for formerly incarcerated individuals. This initiative will train 125 participants, equipping them with AI skills and supporting their job placement, fostering a more inclusive tech industry.
How High-Skilled Immigrants Drive US Job Growth and Innovation
Columbia Business School, March 7, 2025
New research by Columbia Business School Professors Dan Wang and Jorge Guzman and Inara Tareque PhD, ’26BUS, reveals that high-skilled immigrants, including H-1B visa holders, don’t take jobs from native-born workers — instead, they fuel entrepreneurship, innovation, and economic growth, particularly in diverse communities.
February 2025
ResilienceVC Bucks Trend, Unveils $56M Fund to Back Fintechs Working on Financial Inclusion
TechCrunch, February 27, 2025
ResilienceVC, co-founded by adjunct professor Vikas Raj '10, has launched a $56M fund to support fintech startups focused on financial inclusion. This investment aims to empower underserved communities and promote equitable access to financial services, signaling a significant step towards a more inclusive financial future.
Business School Teaching Case Study: How Should Solar-panel Makers Respond to Falling Prices?
Financial Times, February 10, 2025
In the face of plummeting solar panel prices, how should manufacturers adapt? In this business-school style case study, Professor Gernot Wagner examines how Chinese pioneer Longi is navigating the challenges of commodification.
How Do We Advance Equality in This New Era? These Leaders Show Us a Path Forward
Forbes, February 6, 2025
"As we face shifting political landscapes, the question is not if we can continue to advance gender equality, but how we can amplify our impact," says S. Mona Sinha '93, institute advisory board member and global executive director of Equality Now.
January 2025
Teaching Award: Rising to the Challenge
Financial Times, January 22, 2025
Congratulations to Professor Gernot Wagner for being recognized for his leadership on the Climate Knowledge Initiative (CKI) in the "highly commend" category of the Financial Times's Responsible Business Education award for teaching! The award shows how "academics are reimagining curricula by integrating sustainability, experiential learning, and advanced technologies to tackle global challenges." CKI provides business leaders with the curated, actionable knowledge needed to pick investable and scalable green technologies, while unapologetically flagging areas where business and public interests diverge.
The 2025 Trailblazers in Health Care
City & State, January 21, 2025
Congratulations to James Hendon '12 for being named one of New York’s notable policymakers, providers, and practitioners in the medical field in 2025. As New York City’s veterans’ services commissioner, James is focused on improving the lives of military veterans.
How Donald Trump Is Reshaping Global Health
Forbes, January 22, 2025
Sylvana Q. Sinha, '04LAW, founder of Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member Praava Health, wrote this piece on how President Trump's executive order initiating the country's withdrawal from the World Health Organization "has profound implications for global health."
Top Four Clean Mobility Startups Shaping 2025
Forbes, January 8, 2025
Tamer Fund for Social Ventures portfolio member Dollaride, co-founded by Su Sanni, is recognized as an emerging startup in the mobility industry, bringing clean and accessible transportation to underserved communities.