• Jens Ludwig, University of Chicago, “Unforgiving Places: The Unexpected Origins of American Gun Violence”

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        Biography: Jens Ludwig is the Edwin A. and Betty L. Bergman Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago, co-director of the National Bureau of Economic Research working group on the economics of crime, and Pritzker Director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab. He helped found the Crime Lab 16 years ago […]

  • Janet Currie, Princeton University, “Investing in Children to Address the Child Mental Health Crisis”

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    Biography: Janet Currie is the Henry Putnam Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at Princeton University and the co-director of Princeton's Center for Health and Wellbeing.  She also co-directs the Program on Families and Children at the National Bureau of Economic Research.  Currie is a pioneer in the economic analysis of child development.  Her current […]

  • Emma Zang, Yale University, “Life-Course Exposure to State Policy Liberalism Contexts and Later-Life Cognitive Health”

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    Biography: Dr. Emma Zang is an Assistant Professor of Sociology, Biostatistics, and Global Affairs at Yale University. Zang’s research interests lie at the intersection of health and aging, marriage and family, and inequality, with a particular focus on examining these dynamics in both the United States and China. She is also interested in developing and […]

  • Michael Mueller-Smith, University of Michigan, “The Direct and Intergenerational Effects of Criminal History-Based Safety Net Bans in the U.S.”

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    Biography: Mike Mueller-Smith is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Michigan and Faculty Associate at the Population Studies Center. His research focuses on measuring the scope and prevalence of the criminal justice system in the U.S. as well as its broadly defined impact on the population. He is the […]

  • Eliana La Ferrara, Harvard Kennedy School, “Changing Harmful Norms through Information and Coordination: Experimental Evidence from Somalia”

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    Biography: Eliana La Ferrara is Professor of Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School. She received a PhD in Economics from Harvard in 1999. Prior to joining HKS, she was the Invernizzi Chair in Development Economics at Bocconi University, Milan, where she founded and directed the Laboratory for Effective Anti-poverty Policies (LEAP). She is a Past […]

  • Sarah Brayne, Stanford University, “Living and Dying in the Shadow of Mass Incarceration”

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    Biography: Sarah Brayne is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology. In her work, she uses qualitative and quantitative methods to understand whether and how data-intensive surveillance shapes individual trajectories and population-level disparities. Her first book, Predict and Surveil: Data, Discretion, and the Future of Policing, draws on ethnographic research within the Los Angeles […]

  • Robert Fairlie, University of California, Los Angeles, “Affirmative Action, Faculty Productivity and Caste Interactions: Evidence from Engineering Colleges in India”

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    Biography: Fairlie is a Distinguished Professor at UCLA. He is an Economist and Chair of the Department of Public Policy. He is also a member of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). He studies a wide range of topics including entrepreneurship, education, labor, racial, gender and caste inequality, information technology, immigration, health, and development. […]

  • Workshop: Yiqing Xu, Stanford University, “Factorial Difference-in-Differences”

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    Biography: Dr. Xu's primary research covers political methodology, Chinese politics, and their intersection. He received a PhD in Political Science from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2016), an MA in Economics from China Center for Economic Research at Peking University (2010) and a BA in Economics from Fudan University (2007). His work has appeared in leading […]

  • Sherry Glied, New York University Wagner School, “Who Really Pays for Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance? General Reflections and New Evidence from the ACA Dependent Coverage Mandate”

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    Biography: Sherry Glied, an economist, is Dean of the Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service at New York University. From 2010-2012, Glied served as the Senate-confirmed Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation at the Department of Health and Human Services. She served as Senior Economist on the President’s Council of Economic Advisers in […]

  • Marissa Thompson, Columbia University “They have Black in their blood: Exploring how genetic ancestry tests affect racial appraisals and classifications”

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    Biography: Marissa Thompson is an assistant professor of sociology at Columbia University. Her research focuses on the causes and consequences of racial and socioeconomic inequality, with an emphasis on understanding the role of education in shaping disparate outcomes over the life-course. Marissa’s current research investigates, for example, parental preferences regarding school segregation, the causal effects […]

  • Sarah Miller, University of Michigan, “Does Income Affect Health? Evidence from the OpenResearch Unconditional Income Study”

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    Biography: Sarah Miller is an associate professor at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. She received a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2012. Dr. Miller's research interests are in health economics and, in particular, the short-term and long-term effects of public policies that expand health […]

  • Workshop: Grant Writing

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    Featuring Martha Bailey, Gilbert Gee, Naomi Sugie, and Janet Stein   A recording of this workshop may be accessed here. The slides of the presentation may be accessed here.

  • Lisa Dettling, Federal Reserve Board, “Did the Modern Mortgage Set the Stage for the Baby Boom?”

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    Biography: Lisa Dettling is a Principal Economist in the Division of Research and Statistics at the Federal Reserve Board, where she is part of the team that forecasts the economic effects of fiscal policy (taxes, transfers, and government spending). She is currently on leave from the Board and visiting CCPR this fall. Lisa's academic research […]

  • Susan Cassels, University of California, Santa Barbara, “Patterns of Sexual Minority Men’s Lifestyle and Healthcare Related Activity Spaces in Los Angeles”

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    Biography: Dr. Susan Cassels is a Professor in the Department of Geography at UCSB, and the Director of the Broom Center for Demography. She studies and teaches topics related to health geography, demography, and infectious disease epidemiology. The central focus of her research is on geographic mobility, sexual health, and HIV prevention. Her current research […]

  • Dan Thompson, University of California, Los Angeles, “How Much Does Health Affect Voter Participation?”

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    Biography: Dan Thompson is an assistant professor of political science at UCLA studying American politics and political methodology. He studies how the rules governing elections affect who participates, who wins, and ultimately the policies governments choose. He collects new data on elections and electoral institutions which he combinse with large administrative datasets on government behavior. […]

  • Reflections on Graduate Training at CCPR/UCLA: A Panel to Honor Judith Seltzer

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    Join us for a panel to honor Prof. Judith Seltzer's career and graduate training with CCPR and UCLA! Prof. Judith Seltzer is a founding member and former director of CCPR. She received the Sara McLanahan award from the Population Association of America. Panelists include former UCLA / CCPR graduate students Esther Friedman (Research Associate Professor, […]

  • Workshop: Jake Anderson, University of California, Los Angeles, “Transitioning to Industry: Tech Pathways for Academics”

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    Description: Join us for a session on navigating the transition from academia to industry, specifically in tech roles. Led by Jake Anderson, a CCPR trainee from the Economics department who has worked as a Data Science Manager and Senior Data Scientist in San Francisco, this workshop will guide you through reframing academic projects and experience […]

  • Anne Karing, University of Chicago, “Incentives and Motivation Crowd-Out: Experimental Evidence from Childhood Immunization”

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    Biography: Anne Karing’s research focuses on the economics of healthcare delivery and health-seeking behaviors in low-income countries, applying insights from psychology. Her core work examines how social signaling motives can change behaviors, in ways that benefit individual health and society. She has implemented large-scale field experiments that examine the effectiveness of social signaling incentives in […]

  • Workshop: CCPR Computing Orientation

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    A recording of Roger Silanoe’s presentation may be accessed here. The slides of the presentation may be accessed here.

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