Columbia University

For Support Of Assessing The Impact Of The Mexico City Policy

Overview
This grant will enable researchers at Columbia University to track and document the impacts of the expanded Mexico City Policy on access to and utilization of contraception, abortion, and related reproductive health services, including at the clinic and provider levels. The Columbia team will work with a network of partners in Kenya to pilot a methodology to document the impacts of the policy. The project team will collect baseline data and help strengthen the capacity of local research and service provision partners in Kenya to gather data. They plan to share the methodology and findings with other organizations working to assess the impacts of the policy.
About the Grantee
Grantee Website
www.columbia.edu 
Address
2960 Broadway, New York, NY, 10027-6902, United States
Grants to this Grantee
for the Center on Global Energy Policy’s China Energy and Climate Program  
This grant is to support the China Energy and Climate Program at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy to promote low-carbon development in China and around the world, inform stakeholders about Chinese energy and climate policies, and promote system optimization and multilateral engagement on the issue. (Substrategy: China National Policy)
for the Center on Global Energy Policy’s China Energy and Climate Program  
This grant is to support the China Energy and Climate Program (CECP) at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy to promote low-carbon development in China and around the world, inform stakeholders about Chinese energy and climate policies, and promote cooperation between China and the U.S. on energy and climate issues. (Substrategy: China National Policy)
for the Center for Political Economy  
The Center for Political Economy at Columbia University aims to identify and advance the most promising post-2008 developments within economics, and promote a new political economy, distinctive for our time, with an institutional, cross-disciplinary orientation connecting economics to law, political science, sociology, public health, engineering, and data science, with philosophical underpinnings. The center will gather initiatives and individual scholarly programs already underway, helping faculty span disciplines and fields of inquiry while anchoring a series of investigations into fundamental topics. The center will also seed new research, scholarly publications, and policy outputs and foster curricular materials that will feed into textbooks and coursework. At the core of its work, the center will develop idea labs concerned with such vital areas as firm size and antitrust, work and labor, money and finance, climate change, and inequalities. This grant provides general (program) support for the Center for Political Economy at Columbia University.

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