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Traffic Stops and Race: Police Conduct May Bend to Local Biases
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Traffic Stops and Race: Police Conduct May Bend to Local Biases

Traffic stops, which happen approximately 50,000 times each day in the United States, are the most common interaction between law enforcement and the public, according to data from the Stanford Open Policing Project. These stops can result in nothing more than a friendly warning or can escalate into an arrest using force. All other factors being...

Empathy Softens Teachers’ Biases, Reduces Racial Gap in Student Suspensions
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Empathy Softens Teachers’ Biases, Reduces Racial Gap in Student Suspensions

Interventions that seek to evoke empathy in teachers can sideline biases and narrow the racial gap in suspensions of middle school students, suggests new research from the University of California, Berkeley. In one of the most rigorous efforts to date to combat race-based inequity in school suspensions, UC Berkeley social psychologist Jason Okonofua and fellow...

California State University Alumnae: Women Changemakers in Wine
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California State University Alumnae: Women Changemakers in Wine

Four million people globally are proud to call themselves alumni of the 23 campuses of the California State University, and one in 10 employees in California is a CSU graduate. With those numbers, it’s no wonder the impact that CSU alumni have on California’s economy. One of the state’s key industries is also uniquely impacted by CSU...

National Task Force Finds Violence Against K-12 Employees Reaching Crisis Levels
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National Task Force Finds Violence Against K-12 Employees Reaching Crisis Levels

While much of school violence research centers on the safety of students, educators also suffer acts of violence and abuse at troubling levels leading to a desire to quit the field or transfer jobs, according to new research from the American Psychological Association Task Force on Violence Against Educators and School Personnel. The task force, led by...

Criminologist Discusses Intersection of Criminal Justice and Immigration
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Criminologist Discusses Intersection of Criminal Justice and Immigration

Immigration has been a politically charged topic for decades in the U.S. What’s missing from the discussion is consideration of criminal justice practice and policy, says Xavier Perez, a criminology faculty member in DePaul University’s College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences. He calls the intersection of the two “crimmigation” and says that although immigration...

Higher Minimum Wage May Reduce Rent Defaults but Raise Rent Payments
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Higher Minimum Wage May Reduce Rent Defaults but Raise Rent Payments

While there is a debate among economists about the benefits of increasing the minimum wage, a new study found that a higher minimum wage was associated with fewer people defaulting on their rent payments – until landlords responded by raising rent. The study – recently published in the Journal of Urban Economics – was one of the...

Stanford-Led Research Reveals How People’s Experience with Climate-Related Disasters Affects Their Willingness to Take and Accept Protective Actions
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Stanford-Led Research Reveals How People’s Experience with Climate-Related Disasters Affects Their Willingness to Take and Accept Protective Actions

Two new studies – a survey of residents in hurricane-battered Florida and Texas and a survey of people in wildfire-scarred California – reveal that negative personal experiences are among key variables in pushing people to take or accept protective measures like flood insurance and planned power shut offs. The wildfire survey, published in Energy Research & Social Science, is among...

Do Bikeshare Systems Complement or Replace Public Transit?
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Do Bikeshare Systems Complement or Replace Public Transit?

Bikeshare systems have come a long way since they were first introduced in the Netherlands in the 1960s. They are popular in cities around the world, but how do bike systems affect existing public transportation? That’s the topic of a new paper from the University of Illinois, published in Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice....

Big Spike in 2016 Chicago Youth Homicides Linked to Pause in State Funding
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Big Spike in 2016 Chicago Youth Homicides Linked to Pause in State Funding

After two-year state budget impasse ended, Chicago youth homicide numbers declined State budget funds programs that serve Chicago’s most vulnerable populations ‘Must consider state funding and social services as part of a violence-prevention strategy’ In 2016, homicides among Chicagoans aged 15 to 24 drastically spiked. Then in 2017, youth homicides boomeranged back to lower, pre-2015 levels....