Skip to content
  • Harvard Kennedy School
  • Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy
  • About Us
  • Follow us on Facebook
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • Donate
The Journalist's Resource logo
  • About Us
  • Follow us on Facebook
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • Donate
  • Criminal Justice
  • Economics
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Media
  • Politics & Government
  • Race & Gender
  • Criminal Justice
  • Economics
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Media
  • Politics & Government
  • Race & Gender

Expert Commentary

swing voters
Media, Politics & Government

Election Beat 2020: Where did all the swing voters go?

by Thomas E. Patterson | September 8, 2020

Today’s presidential nominees need not only convince voters that they’re the better choice but also that their party is an acceptable choice, writes Thomas E. Patterson.

Expert Commentary

Economics, Politics & Government

Did U.S. taxpayers spend or save their COVID-19 stimulus checks? Follow the liquidity

by Clark Merrefield | September 4, 2020

Two recent surveys come to broadly different conclusions on how people used their their stimulus checks. One consistency between the two: People with less liquidity tended to part with their stimulus rather than save.

Expert Commentary

school re-open COVID-19 coronavirus research students
Economics, Education, Health, Politics & Government

Reopening schools amid the coronavirus pandemic: 5 research studies to consider

by Denise-Marie Ordway | September 1, 2020

As education officials re-open schools for the fall semester or debate the possibility, we look at research on the role children play in the transmission of COVID-19.

Expert Commentary

white evangelicals
Politics & Government, Race & Gender

Election Beat 2020: The influential roles of white evangelicals and ‘religious nones’

by Thomas E. Patterson | September 1, 2020

Scholar Thomas E. Patterson considers the roles of white evangelicals and the religiously unaffiliated in the 2020 election.

Expert Commentary

conventions
Media, Politics & Government

Election Beat 2020: An exploration of the ‘convention bounce’

by Thomas E. Patterson | August 25, 2020

Every presidential nominating convention since 1996 has produced a bump in the polls — referred to as a “convention bounce” — of 2% or less, Tom Patterson writes.

Expert Commentary

coronavirus vaccines
Health

Coronavirus vaccines: We address 3 big questions about safety, distribution and adoption

by Kerry Dooley Young | August 23, 2020

As journalists work to keep communities informed about COVID-19 vaccines, they need to consider questions about safety, distribution and adoption. We address three specific questions, focusing on policies and processes in the U.S.

Expert Commentary

COVID-19 vaccine
Health

Reporting on coronavirus vaccines: 5 tips to help journalists inject audiences with the facts

by Kerry Dooley Young | August 23, 2020

To help reporters make sense of what’s known and yet to be learned about COVID-19 vaccines, we asked for insights from the experts.

Expert Commentary

postal service
Health, Politics & Government

The U.S. Postal Service: 5 studies to know about voting by mail, pricing for Amazon, the role of the mail in public health and more

by Clark Merrefield | August 21, 2020

The U.S. Postal Service may play an outsized role in elections this year. This research roundup can help inform news coverage of voting by mail.

Expert Commentary

Economics, Politics & Government, Race & Gender

Municipal bonds: 5 studies on racism, climate change, aging populations and credit ratings

by Clark Merrefield | August 21, 2020

Covering municipal bonds may seem fun as chewing cardboard. But they can affect the social and cultural character of places people live. These five studies explore the intersection of munis, racism, climate change and more.

Expert Commentary

2020 Election
Media, Politics & Government, Race & Gender

Election Beat 2020: Focus on America’s two largest recent immigrant groups

by Thomas E. Patterson | August 18, 2020

“In 2020, Hispanics and Asian Americans — the nation’s two largest recent immigrant groups — deserve close attention,” writes Harvard professor Thomas E. Patterson

Post pagination
← Previous 1 … 49 50 51 … 289 Next →
  • Know Your ResearchTip sheets and explainers to help journalists understand academic research methods, find and recognize high-quality research, investigate scientific misconduct and research errors, and avoid missteps when reporting on new studies and public opinion polls

Sign up for our newsletter

  • Sign up. It’s free!If you sign up for our free e-mail newsletter, you’ll receive a weekly update of important new resources to inform your news coverage and consumption.

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.

Sign up to receive a weekly e-mail newsletter from The Journalist's Resource.

Subscribe
Shorenstein Center Logo

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.

  • Home
  • About
  • How to make a donation to The Journalist’s Resource
  • RSS
  • Know Your Research
  • EU/EEA Privacy Disclosures

Find us:

  • JR on Facebook
  • X
Creative Commons BY ND

Unless otherwise noted, this site and its contents – with the exception of photographs – are licensed under a Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-ND 4.0) license. That means you are free to republish our content both online and in print, and we encourage you to do so via the “republish this article” button. We only ask that you follow a few basic guidelines.