Over the last 20 years, water quality modeling for international or transboundary river basin systems has become an increasingly important area of planning and management for sustainable development, as well as a basis for the evaluation of international treaty regimes that are established to implement sustainability agreements.
As natural disasters rise in frequency and intensity, already strained state budgets struggle with disaster relief. Moving into an uncertain future of climate change, what can states do to protect themselves?
With artificial intelligence systems becoming an increasingly important factor in government and business, public policy professionals must be prepared to engage with the biases that can influence artificial intelligence.