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Expert Commentary

Health, Politics & Government

Republican and Democratic doctors treat patients differently

by David Trilling | November 7, 2016

A study by Yale University scholars suggests doctors’ political affiliation influences their approach to health issues such as marijuana use, abortion and firearm storage.

Expert Commentary

Economics, Health, Politics & Government, Race & Gender

Food stamp use by Mexican immigrant families: Welfare reform research

by Denise-Marie Ordway | November 7, 2016

Research in Social Science Research indicates poor Mexican immigrant families are far less likely than poor U.S. native families to participate in the federal food stamp program.

Expert Commentary

Criminal Justice, Health

Background checks on ammunition, guns may drastically reduce deaths

by David Trilling | November 7, 2016

An analysis in The Lancet finds that national implementation of background checks on ammo purchases alone could reduce gun-related deaths by 81 percent.

Expert Commentary

Politics & Government, Race & Gender

The role of race in voter turnout

by Lauren Leatherby | November 6, 2016

Research in the American Journal of Political Science suggests a higher turnout among minorities in voting districts where minorities make up most of the voting-age population.

Expert Commentary

Media

Smartphone users trust strangers less: New research

by David Trilling | November 5, 2016

This PLoS ONE study indicates that people who consume more information on mobile phones have less trust in neighbors, strangers and people of other religions.

Expert Commentary

Economics, Education, Politics & Government, Race & Gender

Girls in blue-collar communities face poorer job prospects

by Courtney Han | November 4, 2016

Young women in blue-collar communities are less likely to have jobs eight years after high school than their peers in other areas, an American Sociological Review study finds.

Expert Commentary

Politics & Government

Combat deaths and voter turnout: Public opinion in democracies at war

by David Trilling | November 2, 2016

People with little interest in politics vote more during violent wars, a 2016 study in the American Journal of Political Science finds. Overall, people vote less if there have been few recent war deaths.

Expert Commentary

davidtrilling.com
Economics, Environment

Bike lanes benefit non-riders more than riders: New research

by David Trilling | October 31, 2016

A 2016 study in BMJ Injury Prevention finds that for every dollar New York City spends on new bike lanes, more people ride and overall public health improves.

Expert Commentary

Education, Health

Child vaccines: When parents refuse them and are dismissed by pediatricians

by Denise-Marie Ordway | October 31, 2016

2016 paper published in Pediatrics that looks at how often U.S. parents refuse or delay childhood vaccinations and how often pediatricians dismiss patients for vaccine refusal.

Expert Commentary

Criminal Justice, Media, Politics & Government

How news photos sway support for foreign wars

by David Trilling | October 24, 2016

2016 study in Political Communication that examines how news photographs can impact public support for military action.

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Editor’s Picks

4 takeaways on the economic consequences of the Iran war
Economics, Environment, Politics & Government

4 takeaways on the economic consequences of the Iran war

March 20, 2026

Economic uncertainty, windfalls for oil producers, how businesses communicate with the president and artificial intelligence — check out the insights from our webinar with EconoFact.

Childhood vaccines: What research shows about their safety and potential side effects
Health, Politics & Government

Childhood vaccines: What research shows about their safety and potential side effects

January 5, 2026

In this piece, we share reporting tips, explain how vaccine side effects are tracked in the U.S., and discuss research on the safety of childhood vaccines.

Expert Commentary

287(g): The program that lets state and local police perform the functions of federal immigration officers
Criminal Justice, Politics & Government

287(g): The program that lets state and local police perform the functions of federal immigration officers

April 30, 2025

“In the span of about two months, the Trump administration radically expanded the 287(g) program beyond anything I have seen in the past 15 years of close study of this precise policy,” writes immigration scholar Austin Kocher.

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A project of Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center, The Journalist’s Resource curates, summarizes and contextualizes high-quality research on newsy public policy topics. We are supported by generous grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, The National Institute for Health Care Management (NIHCM) Foundation, Lumina Foundation, and individual contributors.

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