All Events
8 Events
international migration

International Migration: VoxDevLit Launch Event

At this VoxDevLit launch event, Dean Yang will outline the key takeaways for policy from his review of the evidence on international migration.
Zoom
14 January 2026
14:00 – 15:00 GMT
tractor in Africa

Industrial Development: Structural Transformation

On Wednesday February 18th (15:00 GMT), Bruno Caprettini and Luis Felipe Sáenz will discuss structural transformation, providing a brief history, key facts, and main theories.
Zoom
18 February 2026
15:00 – 16:00 GMT
cargo ship

Industrial Development: Export-Led Growth & Industrial Policy

On Wednesday February 25th (15:00 GMT), Jaedo Choi and Michael Sposi will review export-led growth and industrial policy.
Zoom
25 February 2026
15:00 – 16:00 GMT
robotic arm

Industrial Development: Present and Future of Industrialisation

On Tuesday March 10th (15:00 GMT), Tristan Reed, Rodimiro Rodrigo, Gustavo de Souza, and Markus Poschke will cover the present and future of industrialisation, focusing on trade, automation, and firms.
Zoom
10 March 2026
15:00 – 16:00 GMT
artificial intelligence

AI Agents for Economics Research

On Thursday March 12th (13:30 GMT), Aniket Panjwani will take us through how development economists can get set up to use agents for research, focusing on the cheapest options currently available, and general lessons for working with agents.
Zoom
12 March 2026
13:30 – 14:30 GMT
services

Industrial Development: Service-Led Growth

On Thursday March 26th (15:00 GMT), Marco Sanfilippo, Matthew Schwartzman and Verena Wiedemann will summarise what we've learned about service-led growth models.
Zoom
26 March 2026
15:00 – 16:00 GMT
globe

The Future of Development: Approaches and Partnerships for a New Reality

Development progress has stalled. Trade barriers are rising, aid flows have plummeted, and private finance remains limited, volatile, and dominated by debt. Leaders must create new partnerships, prioritize impact, and rethink how to fund productive public investments that will increase growth, job creation, and life expectancy. With development funding unlikely to recover soon, the challenge is how to drive systemic change that delivers greater impact at scale with far fewer resources.

The King Center on Global Development, in collaboration with the Hoover Institution’s Emerging Markets Working Group, is bringing together renowned development finance leaders with insights from philanthropy, international financial institutions, government, and the private sector for the second of a two-part event series about the future of aid, with the discussion focusing on Sub-Saharan Africa.

This event will feature:

Mark Suzman, CEO of the Gates Foundation
Ambassador Mark Green (ret), former Administrator of USAID, U.S. Ambassador to Tanzania, and Congressman (WI-8)
Gyude Moore, former Liberian Minister of Public Works
Vera Songwe, Chair and Founder of the Liquidity and Sustainability Facility, former Executive Secretary of UNECA, and former Regional Director for Africa for the World Bank

The program will begin with welcome remarks from Katherine Casey, Faculty Director of the King Center on Global Development, and RoAnn Costin Professor of Political Economy at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Stanford President Jonathan Levin will provide the event introduction. Peter Blair Henry, The Class of 1984 Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, will then lead a fireside chat with Mark Suzman, followed by a panel discussion moderated by Jendayi E. Frazer, The Peter J. and Frances Duignan Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Hoover Institution.

Schedule:
3:00 PM–3:10 PM: Welcome by Katherine Casey and introduction by Jonathan Levin
3:10 PM–3:40 PM: Fireside chat with Mark Suzman and Peter Henry
3:45 PM–5:00 PM: Panel discussion with Mark Green, Gyude Moore, Vera Songwe, and Mark Suzman, moderated by Jendayi Frazer
5:00 PM–6:00 PM: Reception

This event is hosted in partnership with VoxDev.
Gunn SIEPR Building, Koret-Taube Conference Center, Stanford University
5 May 2026
13:00 – 15:00 GMT
manufacturing

Why Dani Rodrik changed his mind on manufacturing

We are really excited for this live episode of the Ideas in Development podcast, taking place next week on Wednesday May 20th at 2pm UK time.

Dani Rodrik will join Managing Editor Oliver Hanney to discuss his evolving views, the evidence that changed his mind, and what this means for future growth strategies. And we'll leave lots of time for questions from the audience.

Please submit any questions to: [email protected]
Zoom
20 May 2026
12:00 – 13:00 GMT