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From Lau v. Nichols to the Affordable Care Act: Forty Years of Ensuring Meaningful Access in Health Care

05.31.14

Abstract This article commemorates Lau v. Nichols on its fortieth anniversary by examining language access rights in the new era of health care reform following the passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Language assistance services are critical to accessing health care. Starting with Lau and ending with the ACA’s nondiscrimination provision, this article surveys the progression […]

Health

Shaping the Mainstream As An Asian American Woman: Politics Within Politics

05.30.14

Abstract This commentary illustrates how women of color, including Asian Americans, are rarely associated with having an active role in American politics. Based upon my experiences as the communications director for a state legislative race in Virginia, I shed light on hidden stereotypes associated with the intersection of gender, race, and nationality that emerge within political […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Citizen Editorial Team Spotlight

05.29.14

For our final Spotlight of the year, we bring you a portrait of some of the incredible staff here at The Citizen. They selflessly gave their time to bring you the news, opinion, and culture relevant to you throughout the year. (Please take a moment to visit www.theHKScitizen.com to read profiles of other extraordinary students […]

REFLECTIONS: Last Words of the Graduating Class

05.29.14

The Citizen asked students to share their ‘last words’ in mini 140-character messages, adopting a practice from the social-networking service, Twitter. Why 140 characters? Well, Twitter founders chose 140 characters to stay within the limit of worldwide text-messaging services (at 160 characters). They didn’t want messages to be broken up in multiple parts when sent […]

REFLECTIONS: Love Conquers All: Charity Is Pure Love

05.29.14

By Greg Pavone, MPP’14 From the time I was about fourteen, my dream has been to graduate from Harvard Business School, get a high-powered job on Wall Street as an investment banker, and then get rich or die trying. In my immature mind, I thought that money equaled fulfillment in life. That all changed when, […]

REFLECTIONS: To My Fellow Classmates: Please Bring HKS Home with You

05.29.14

By Karla Peterson, MPP’14 “Congratulations! You’ve been accepted to the Harvard Kennedy School.” These are the words that in March 2012 marked one of the happiest days of my life, and the beginning of an extraordinary journey. My first days at the Kennedy School were, without a doubt, a very humbling experience. The first weeks […]

REFLECTIONS: Crossing the Finish Line

05.29.14

By Siahoe Lim, Mason Fellow/MPA “Are you crazy?” Those were the honest first words of disbelief from my husband and two sons when I first broached my proposal to apply for a mid-career Master’s program in public administration at the Harvard Kennedy School. Looking back at the rigors of the Kennedy School curriculum and the daily struggles […]

REFLECTIONS: The things I learned at HKS

05.29.14

By Julia Fetherston, MPP’14 Ninety nine days ago, I began asking second-year public policy students: What is one thing you learned at HKS? Their responses amount to a remarkable catalogue of life at 79 JFK Street, including: Dean David Ellwood will accept any invitation to perform a musical number in costume. The supply of bathrooms […]

REFLECTIONS: The Presence of Absence: An ode to seeking all that is not there

05.29.14

By Asma Jaber, MPP’14 Fifteen years ago, my daily routine was to say to my late father, “No! Not at the entrance. Drop me off here!” – hoping my adolescent friends would not see me running from a glaring yellow taxi into my middle school. The taxi was how my father, a twice-displaced Palestinian refugee, […]

REFLECTIONS: Reflecting on the HKS experience: The sacrifices we’ve made and the people we’ve become

05.29.14

By Adrienne Murphy, MPP’14 As the students filed out of my classroom one mid-May afternoon, I noticed Ricky lingering quietly, pretending to read the newspaper articles posted on a bulletin board in the back of the room. “Ricky, do you need something?” I asked. (No student ever actually stopped to read the articles.) After a […]

REFLECTIONS: Cultivating our eulogy virtues

05.29.14

By Claudia Newman-Martin, MPP’14 I clearly remember arriving here two years ago. I remember spending 20 minutes searching for Littauer, and the next 15 looking for a bathroom that was (a) empty; (b) clean; and (c) not able to be heard by everyone in the library. The thing I remember most clearly was the question […]

REFLECTIONS: The Island Of Harvard

05.29.14

Simon R. Bone, MC/MPA Overcast grey skies that whisper wildly with the wind. A chilling cold that cuts through bone and carcass. An airport that closes down due to bad weather A sense of isolation as you long for new experiences of the outside world. But this is not what you expect. This is not […]

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