Projecting costs for the most burdened renters
In this 2015 study, researchers from Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies and Enterprise Community Partners Inc. analyzed the growing trend of severely cost-burdened renters.
Research roundups, tip sheets, articles and explainers related to the topic of economics and economic equality
In this 2015 study, researchers from Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies and Enterprise Community Partners Inc. analyzed the growing trend of severely cost-burdened renters.
Expert Commentary
2015 updated selection of research on the wide range of impacts of retail chain stores, including on small local business, county-level employment, and more.
Expert Commentary
2014 study from a scholar at the University of Maryland School of Public Policy that looks at child health and food policies in developing countries, including Bangladesh, India, Kenya and the Philippines.
Expert Commentary
A 2015 study from Cornell University examines the impact of paternal incarceration on children’s social and behavioral functioning.
Expert Commentary
2013 roundup of recent studies and papers on affirmative action, admissions, campus diversity and racial attitudes at U.S. universities.
Expert Commentary
2015 report published in Population Studies examines the practice by some Chinese parents of adopting girls and raising them as future wives for their biological sons.
Expert Commentary
2015 review of scholarship on impact of air pollution in the United States, including health effects, economic costs and automotive and transportation causes.
Expert Commentary
This 2015 study looks at the impacts that legalizing gambling has on the local and state government expenditures and revenues.
Expert Commentary
A 2015 study published in Urban Studies looks at changes in housing prices before and after the introduction of LIHTC subsidized housing.
Expert Commentary
2015 research brief from Scholars Strategy Network and the University of Iowa that explores inequalities in how U.S. government “safety net” programs serve the poor.
Expert Commentary