California’s local governments are transforming a traditionally mundane function into a strategic lever.
The Silicon Valley model offers lessons for regions around the world as they look to grow their own startup ecosystems.
Subnational jurisdictions are grappling with the tangible impacts that AI is beginning to have. Their efforts provide an important space to learn best practices for policy going forward.
This series offers a deep dive into the Silicon Valley ecosystem, its continuing evolution, and its connections to the world amid new waves of technological innovation and geopolitical disruption.
California is ground zero for engagement.
“Country living” became the way Asian immigrants pictured the ideal American life, but the reality was more complex.
How groundbreaking infrastructure projects will shape cities and geopolitics.
How domestic and global trends could reshape both U.S. policy and geopolitical standing.
The author of Sea Change explains the frustration, grief, and anger of the people at the forefront of the environmental crisis.
To Push Back, the West Must Invest More in Urban Life
Turnout, the top-two primary system, and Proposition 1 all offer insights into voters’ mindsets.
The state’s democracy innovations will be front and center, and some races will be closely watched as early indicators of possible November outcomes.
Subnational jurisdictions are grappling with the tangible impacts that AI is beginning to have. Their efforts provide an important space to learn best practices for policy going forward.
To Push Back, the West Must Invest More in Urban Life
Westward-looking, often aligned with their fellow Americans, and confident in U.S. global engagement, Californians would prefer that the role of their state and local leaders on the world stage be decided close to home.
Carnegie California draws on a deep bench of Carnegie expertise to bring California and West Coast perspectives on global issues to key audiences in the United States and around the world, to shape policy debates in California, and to develop Carnegie’s capacity to understand and impact the role of subnational regions in global cooperation.
Sign up to receive emails from Carnegie!