Skip to main content
The Samuel DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity at Duke University
  • About
      • About Samuel DuBois Cook
      • Director’s Message
      • Contact Us
        • People
          • Distinguished Fellows
          • Career Achievement Award
        • Work With Us
          • Outside Opportunities
      • The Samuel DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity is a scholarly collaborative that studies the causes and consequences of inequality and develops remedies for these disparities and their adverse effects.

  • Research
        • Research Themes
          • Class, Wealth, & Social Mobility
          • Health Equity
          • Education Equity & Policy
          • Visual Narratives of Inequality
          • Environmental Justice
          • Policing Enforcement & Justice
          • Artificial Intelligence
      • Books
      • Journal Articles
      • Reports, Briefs, and Essays
  • Education
        • Duke Courses
          • Global Inequality Research Initiative (GIRI) Seminar
        • High School Programs
          • Hank & Billye Suber Aaron Young Scholars Summer Research Institute
        • Undergraduate Programs
          • Inequality Studies Minor
      • Graduate Programs
      • Doctoral Fellows Program
      • Postdoctoral Programs
        • Faculty Programs
          • Diversity Initiative for Tenure in Economics (DITE)
  • Media
      • Voices in Equity Podcast
      • Shame of Chicago
      • Durham’s Black Wall Street Exhibit
  • News & Events
      • Arko Dasgupta on Rabindranath Tagore in The Indian Express

        By Rachel Ruff | May 9, 2025

        In a recent article for The Indian Express, doctoral fellow Arko Dasgupta reflects on Rabindranath Tagore’s timeless warning: “I will never allow patriotism to triumph over humanity.” Writing amid today’s surge of nationalist fervor and aggressive border politics, Dasgupta draws parallels to Tagore’s own apprehensions about nationalism’s mechanizing force on human relationships. Dasgupta urges readers…

        Read More...

        Charting New Waters: Arielle Solomon ’25 on Marine Science, Inequality Studies, and Learning to See the World Differently

        By Rachel Ruff | May 9, 2025

        This weekend, Arielle Solomon will graduate from Duke with a major in Marine Science and Conservations and a minor in Inequality Studies, a combination that displays her appreciation for both animal science and the humanities. Originally from Tampa, Florida, Solomon began her college journey at NYU, where she was studying international relations. “I originally wanted…

        Read More...

        Looking Beyond Yourself: Kelly Padalino ’25 on the Value of Inequality Studies and her experience at Duke

        By Rachel Ruff | May 8, 2025

        When Kelly Padalino was applying to college, her plan was simple: focus on her academics but continue dancing. Her decision to attend Duke set her on a path that combined her love of the arts and public policy, and later, a new understanding of inequality. “I definitely chose Duke because I really wanted to do…

        Read More...
      • View All
  • Donate
      • How does your gift help the Cook Center?

        Since beginning in the mid-2010s, the Cook Center has steadily and robustly developed its research, programming, multimedia, and educational activities. In just its first decade of operations, the Center already has created a host of different working groups that have written and disseminated innumerable reports and academic papers, developed a minor in inequality studies in conjunction with the Duke History department, published multiple books, launched a podcast, and created and sustained programs to support young scholars and tenure-track researchers.

        Make a gift today to support the cook center
  • About
      • About Samuel DuBois Cook
      • Director’s Message
      • Contact Us
        • People
          • Distinguished Fellows
          • Career Achievement Award
        • Work With Us
          • Outside Opportunities
      • The Samuel DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity is a scholarly collaborative that studies the causes and consequences of inequality and develops remedies for these disparities and their adverse effects.

  • Research
        • Research Themes
          • Class, Wealth, & Social Mobility
          • Health Equity
          • Education Equity & Policy
          • Visual Narratives of Inequality
          • Environmental Justice
          • Policing Enforcement & Justice
          • Artificial Intelligence
      • Books
      • Journal Articles
      • Reports, Briefs, and Essays
  • Education
        • Duke Courses
          • Global Inequality Research Initiative (GIRI) Seminar
        • High School Programs
          • Hank & Billye Suber Aaron Young Scholars Summer Research Institute
        • Undergraduate Programs
          • Inequality Studies Minor
      • Graduate Programs
      • Doctoral Fellows Program
      • Postdoctoral Programs
        • Faculty Programs
          • Diversity Initiative for Tenure in Economics (DITE)
  • Media
      • Voices in Equity Podcast
      • Shame of Chicago
      • Durham’s Black Wall Street Exhibit
  • News & Events
      • Arko Dasgupta on Rabindranath Tagore in The Indian Express

        By Rachel Ruff | May 9, 2025

        In a recent article for The Indian Express, doctoral fellow Arko Dasgupta reflects on Rabindranath Tagore’s timeless warning: “I will never allow patriotism to triumph over humanity.” Writing amid today’s surge of nationalist fervor and aggressive border politics, Dasgupta draws parallels to Tagore’s own apprehensions about nationalism’s mechanizing force on human relationships. Dasgupta urges readers…

        Read More...

        Charting New Waters: Arielle Solomon ’25 on Marine Science, Inequality Studies, and Learning to See the World Differently

        By Rachel Ruff | May 9, 2025

        This weekend, Arielle Solomon will graduate from Duke with a major in Marine Science and Conservations and a minor in Inequality Studies, a combination that displays her appreciation for both animal science and the humanities. Originally from Tampa, Florida, Solomon began her college journey at NYU, where she was studying international relations. “I originally wanted…

        Read More...

        Looking Beyond Yourself: Kelly Padalino ’25 on the Value of Inequality Studies and her experience at Duke

        By Rachel Ruff | May 8, 2025

        When Kelly Padalino was applying to college, her plan was simple: focus on her academics but continue dancing. Her decision to attend Duke set her on a path that combined her love of the arts and public policy, and later, a new understanding of inequality. “I definitely chose Duke because I really wanted to do…

        Read More...
      • View All
  • Donate
      • How does your gift help the Cook Center?

        Since beginning in the mid-2010s, the Cook Center has steadily and robustly developed its research, programming, multimedia, and educational activities. In just its first decade of operations, the Center already has created a host of different working groups that have written and disseminated innumerable reports and academic papers, developed a minor in inequality studies in conjunction with the Duke History department, published multiple books, launched a podcast, and created and sustained programs to support young scholars and tenure-track researchers.

        Make a gift today to support the cook center
The Samuel DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity at Duke University
411 West Chapel Hill Street Suite 1100 Durham, NC 27701
(919) 681-9269
Copyright © 2025 The Samuel DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity at Duke University.
  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • Fickr
  • Twitter
Cleantalk Pixel
  • PHONE
  • EMAIL
  • LOCATION

View Publications
View Site