
Center Retreat Launches START into 2015-2016
In mid-September The START Center team gathered with our partners from the Foster School of Business Arthur W. Buerk Center for Entrepreneurship for our second annual Center-wide retreat. The retreat…
In mid-September The START Center team gathered with our partners from the Foster School of Business Arthur W. Buerk Center for Entrepreneurship for our second annual Center-wide retreat. The retreat…
As the start of Autumn Quarter approaches at the University of Washington, The Strategic Analysis, Research, & Training (START) Center will have some new faces joining our team. We would…
Adjunct Professor Lisa Manhart has devoted much of the last five years of her life to launching a new model of student learning and engagement at the University, mentoring students…
The Strategic Analysis, Research and Training (START) domestic program recently completed its first faculty-student projects. In part two of a two-part series, Phillip Hwang speaks about his work and the…
The Strategic Analysis, Research and Training (START) domestic program recently completed its first round of faculty-student projects. In part one of this two-part series, Research Assistant Anne Althauser speaks about…
HANSHEP member The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, in collaboration with the University of Washington Global Health Start Program, has this month launched a series of fourteen case studies in…
Reducing obesity among children. Investing in early childhood programs. Devising strategies to reduce gun violence. These three efforts illustrate how public health has risen to the top of the civic…
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Grand Challenges in Global Health Initiative is intended to spark innovation and the exchange of ideas around some of the world’s most pressing global…
Public health agencies around the world have expressed the need for affordable, rapid consultation in areas like epidemiology, environmental health, and public health law. Since 2011, the University of Washington…
The START Center’s research is referenced in the following 2013 article by The New Yorker. Why do some innovations spread so swiftly and others so slowly? Consider the very different…