AEI-JHU Fellowship Exchange Program

The Fellowship Exchange Program is a grant program through which Johns Hopkins faculty and American Enterprise Institute scholars are invited to work together on research, teaching, or other projects—and to participate in the intellectual life of each other’s institutions.

This program is one of the pathways that faculty from Johns Hopkins and scholars from AEI have developed to create the opportunity for greater collaboration across the two institutions.

The Fellowship Exchange Program seeks to broaden the points of view and deepen the insights of interested scholars in both institutions; model the virtues of reasoned exchange across difference for students and scholars; build stronger bridges between the academy and think tank sector; and signal to internal and external audiences the importance of bringing a broad range of perspectives into research that carries implications for the nation’s common life.

Bridging Perspectives on the COVID-19 Response
Tony Mills (AEI) and Judd Walson (JHU/BSPH)

Economic Power in an Age of Global Turbulence
Hal Brands (JHU/SAIS) & Michael Strain (AEI)

Scientific Rigor Meets Funding Reform: Rethinking Research Proposal Assessment
Gundula Bosch (JHU/BSPH) & Tony Mills (AEI)

Politics and Economics of the FIFA World Cup
Filipe Campante (JHU/SAIS, CBS) and Stan Veuger (AEI)

Liberal Education: A Contested Question
Robbie Shilliam (JHU/KSAS) and Ben Storey (AEI)

A Managed Care Backlash Redux: Controlling Health Costs Amidst Growing Consumer Frustration
Benedic Ippolito (AEI) and Joseph Levy (JHU/BSPH)

Five Questions on Shaping a Multipolar Order
Yuen Yuen Ang (JHU/KSAS) and Zack Cooper (AEI)

Optimizing the Design and Conduct of Clinical Trials
Ann Ervin (JHU/BSPH) and Kirsten Axelsen (AEI)

Congress is Struggling. Can Changing how its Members are Elected Help?
Kevin Kosar (AEI) and Scott Warren (JHU/KSAS)

Practical Cost Benefit Analysis Seminar
Richard Bruns (JHU/BSPH) and Philip Wallach (AEI)

The Health Promoting Value of Work for Medicaid Enrollees with Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders
Matthew Eisenberg (JHU/BSPH), Catherine Ettman (JHU/BSPH), Brendan Saloner (JHU/BSPH) and Sally Satel (AEI)