Sarah Bloom Raskin is the Colin W. Brown Distinguished Professor of the Practice of Law at Duke University Law School, where she’s faculty director of the Global Financial Markets Center and a senior fellow in the Duke Center on Risk. She was previously a visiting professor and Rubenstein Fellow at Duke Law. From 2014 to 2017, Raskin was deputy secretary of the US Treasury, where, among other achievements, she led development of the G7 Fundamental Elements of Cybersecurity for the Financial Sector. Before that, she was a Federal Reserve Board governor and member of the Federal Open Market Committee. Raskin’s career working in legal and regulatory capacities has centered on financial institutions and regulatory tools pertaining to climate risk, among others.
Previously
How do we know the real effect of inflation on the buying power of individuals in the United States? Unless we change the way we analyze data and evaluate key economic indicat...
The world’s biggest banks and investors have pledged $150 trillion in assets to tackle climate change. But are these commitments actually getting us closer to net zero, consid...