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2018 Grant Recipients

For Applications received in 2017

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Gulrez Shah Azhar

Martinus Nijhoff Award

 

Indian Summer: Three Essays on Heatwave Vulnerability, Estimation, and Adaptation
 

​Gulrez Shah Azhar is an assistant policy researcher at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation and a doctoral candidate at the Pardee RAND Graduate School. A physician with community medicine residency and masters in public health, his interdisciplinary focus is on health, policy, climate, and development issues.

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Laura Bellows

Immigration Enforcement and Student Achievement​

​Laura Bellows is a PhD candidate in public policy at Duke University. Her work focuses on the forces that create and maintain disparities in educational outcomes. Her current research explores how recent increases in immigration enforcement affect educational disparities by immigration status and ethnicity.

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Danielle Carr

​K. Merton Award

 

The Networked Subject: Data and Personhood in the Experimental Neurosciences

​Danielle Carr is a PhD candidate in the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University whose work is located between the history and ethnography of science. Her project examines the emergence of brain implants for affective disorder within the context of late liberal capitalism.

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Robert Collinson

The Causes and Consequences of Residential Evictions: Evidence from New York City

​Robert Collinson is a PhD candidate in public policy at New York University and a doctoral fellow at NYU’s Furman Center. His research interests are in public, labor, real estate, and urban economics.

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Sharon Cornelissen

​John L. Stanley Award

 

Greening the Neighborhood: Community, Bucolic Blight, and Race in Northwest Detroit

​Sharon Cornelissen is a doctoral candidate in sociology at Princeton University. Her dissertation draws on fieldwork in Northwest Detroit to show how historical and present inequalities shaped disparate experiences of place. She received her Master’s from the New School for Social Research and her Bachelor from University College Utrecht.

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Veronica Horowitz

​Towards a Sociology of Mercy: A Mixed Methods Analysis of Commutation Release in the United States

​Veronica Horowitz is a doctoral candidate in sociology at the University of Minnesota. Her research focuses broadly on American criminal punishment. Her dissertation explores an understudied form of mercy in US criminal justice, prison release through clemency. She is involved in research on monetary sanctions, drug courts, and domestic abuse.

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Surabhi Karambelkar

Hydropower on the Colorado River: Examining Institutions, Conflicts, and Consequences of Changing Dam Operations​

​Surabhi Karambelkar is a PhD candidate in geography and public policy at the University of Arizona working at the intersection of water and energy policy. Her research examines how institutional arrangements influence hydropower generation in the Colorado River Basin, and how changes in power production impact resource users.

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​Michael J. Laughlin

​Donald R. Cressey Award

 

Racial Disparity in Police Killings

​Michael J. Laughlin earned his Master’s in public affairs and began his PhD in public affairs while serving 10 years in various roles within law enforcement. Michael is currently a Graduate Instructor in the Criminal Justice Department, and is completing his dissertation.

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David S. Lucas

​Eli Ginzberg Award

 

Alleviating Homelessness: Assessing an Alternative Approach

​David S. Lucas earned his PhD in Economics from George Mason University, where he was JIN Fellow with the Hayek Program of the Mercatus Center. He will be a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the Institute for an Entrepreneurial Society in the Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University starting August 2018.

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Adam Markovitz

Irving Louis Horowitz Award

 

Formation, Impact, and Perspectives of Accountable Care Organizations

​Adam Markovitz is a University of Michigan MD/PhD candidate in health policy (economics concentration). His research examines how payment reform affects health care costs and quality. Previously, he trained community health workers in Guatemala and provided legal representation to HIV+ prisoners in Alabama. He holds a BS from Yale University.

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Matthew Pecenco

Do Rehabilitative Prison Policies Work? Evidence from a Natural Experiment in the Dominican Republic

​Matthew Pecenco is a PhD candidate in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at UC Berkeley. His work focuses on the role of the state, in particular the criminal justice system, to aid or impede the lives of those who interact with it.

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​Isabel M. Perera

States of Mind: The Comparative Political Economy of Mental Health

​Isabel M. Perera, a student of political science, employs comparative-historical analysis to explain why the U.S. is the only advanced industrial democracy without an “institutionalized,” comprehensive mental health policy, producing worlds of difference in treatment. In doing so, her research seeks to develop new interpretations of the distribution of social and political power in American life.

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Deepak Premkumar

The Ferguson Effect: Do High-Profile Fatal Encounters with Police Lead to Reductions in Arresting Intensity?

​Deepak Premkumar is a PhD candidate in agricultural & resource economics at UC Berkeley. His current research examines the social costs of policing by investigating the broader effects of police use of force. More generally, he aims to provide an empirical guide to understand and alleviate crime and health disparities.

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Kelly L. Russell

​Becoming Good Investments: Pay for Success and the Financialization of Deservingness

​Kelly L. Russell is a PhD candidate in sociology at the University of Michigan. Her research concerns the American political economy, with a special focus on state‑market relationships in welfare provision. She is currently completing a dissertation on “Pay for Success” as a novel market‑based model for social policy.

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​William Schpero

​Evaluating the Marginal Benefit of Investments in the Health Care Safety Net

​William Schpero is a PhD candidate studying health policy and economics at Yale University. His current research focuses on the value of private markets for publicly funded health care services, as well as the impact of Medicaid policy on access to and quality of care for vulnerable populations.

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Michael J. Schumacher

​Harold D. Lasswell Award

 

Dying to Fight: The Individual and Social Processes of the Foreign Fighter Phenomenon

​Michael J. Schumacher is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science at Loyola University Chicago. He is interested in terrorism and political violence, with a research focus on the Middle East and North Africa. His current research explores the “foreign fighter phenomenon” in historical context.

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Aparna Soni

​Reducing Health Disparities among People Diagnosed with Cancer: The Role of Public Health Insurance Expansions

​Aparna Soni is a PhD candidate in business economics and public policy at Indiana University in Bloomington. Her research explores how policies and incentives can improve health outcomes and reduce risky behaviors in the population. Soni holds an MA in economics and BA in economics and journalism from Boston University.

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Mary Ellen Stitt

​Medicalizing Justice: Therapeutic Alternatives in the Criminal Courts​

​Mary Ellen Stitt is a doctoral candidate in sociology at the University of Texas at Austin. Her dissertation, “Therapeutic Alternatives in the Criminal Courts,” examines the growing use of therapy as an alternative to criminal prosecution in the United States.

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Margaret Thomas

​Material Hardship, Public Program Participation, and Children’s Wellbeing

​Margaret Thomas is a PhD candidate at Boston University School of Social Work. Her research centers on public policy with a focus on deprivation, poverty, and systemic issues. She completed her BA at the University of Notre Dame and holds an MSW from the University of Illinois at Urbana‑Champaign.

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