En este número:

  • Fall 2018
  • The Hollowing Out of Newsrooms
  • Actually, Millennials Are Planning for Retirement
  • Preparing for a Changing Future
  • The Big Picture
  • Noteworthy
  • When 51 Percent Might Not Mean a 'Majority'
  • Australia Commits to Expand Protections in the Outback
  • 'Like a Kid in a Candy Store': Remembering Gerry Lenfest
  • Close Encounters With Killer Whales Offer Clues to Southern Ocean Health
  • Mobile Food Banks Serve Isolated, Rural Poor
  • Juvenile Justice Reform Can Help Young People 'Turn Their Lives Around'
  • The Pew Research Center Remains Focused on the Facts
  • Return on Investment
  • Improving Public Policy
  • Informing the Public
  • Invigorating Civic Life
  • Fishing Subsidies Are Speeding the Decline of Ocean Health
  • End Note: How Americans Value Gender
  • When You Say You Believe In God, What Do You Mean?
  • View All Other Issues
Return on Investment

The Pew Charitable Trusts applies a rigorous, analytical approach to improve public policy, inform the public, and invigorate civic life, as these recent accomplishments illustrate.

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Improving Public Policy

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The Hong Kong Sustainable Seafood Coalition—an organization of 12 Hong Kong and Macau seafood importers, international hotel chains, and retailers—agreed in June to focus on the assessment and avoidance of illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing in its members’ supply chains. Hong Kong imports 90 percent of its seafood, of which up to 75 percent falls within the IUU category, according to local industry estimates. Pew’s ending illegal fishing project says this commitment will help its efforts to persuade global seafood buyers to adopt policies that avoid and assess IUU risks in their supply chains and provide leadership on this issue in the East Asia region.

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Informing the Public

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A Pew Research Center June report examining technology use in 39 countries found that social media use continues to increase in emerging economies while it has plateaued in wealthier nations. The survey also found that a median of 87 percent of adults in advanced economies use the internet at least occasionally or own a smartphone, compared with 64 percent in emerging and developing economies. A smaller gap exists among adults using online social networking sites, with 60 percent of those in advanced economies and 53 percent of those in emerging and developing economies saying they use such sites.

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Invigorating Civic Life

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In June, the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, with support from the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, opened its “Farm for the City” public installation. The exhibit transformed Philadelphia’s Thomas Paine Plaza, located near City Hall, into a temporary 2,000-square-foot garden to encourage public conversations about the role of urban agriculture in strengthening communities. Over four months, the raised-bed gardens were expected to grow about 1,000 pounds of produce, to be donated to Broad Street Ministry, a community service organization dedicated to serving the homeless.

Improving Public Policy The Pew Research Center Remains Focused on the Facts