Donald Chi is a health services researcher and pediatric dentist. His research focuses on understanding and addressing the sociobehavioral determinants of oral health inequities. He is specifically interested in deepening our knowledge of health behaviors, developing and testing interventions aimed at improving oral health inequities, and designing policies aimed at addressing structural barriers to health.
Cynthia Chen’s current research interests include human trajectory analysis (travel behavior analysis), demand forecasting, and survey methods. Broadly put, her focus is to understand human movements in time and space. She focuses on characterizing key characteristics of these movements, identifying regular and irregular patterns, and charting out the lifecycle of these patterns over time.
Her past work has primarily focused on analyzing travel behavior dynamics in response to policy changes. She has also studied residential relocation choices by taking a lifecycle perspective. Her other works have also included deploying GPS technologies in travel surveys and designing rigorous experiments to evaluate the safety impacts of traffic calming measures.
Kam Wing Chan’s research is broadly oriented, and he has focused on urbanization in China since 1949. He has studied the special characteristics of China’s urban process and rural-urban migration, including measurements, trends, the migration control system (the hukou system) and the relationships between urbanization and broader social and economic issues such as social justice, education rights, family togetherness, and the development strategy. His recent publications include Urbanization with Chinese Characteristics: The Hukou System and Migration (2018), and Children of Migrants in China (2020). He has served in as a consultant for the United Nations Population Division, World Bank, and McKinsey & Co. on a number of research and policy projects on China. He is active in public scholarship: his commentaries and interviews have appeared in major international and national media outlets, including The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Guardian, BBC, China Radio International, CBC Radio, The China Daily, and the Caixin Media.
Erin Casey’s research focuses on understanding the etiology and prevention of gender-based violence (GBV). More specifically, her recent work has focused on engaging men and boys in the primary prevention of GBV, and on understanding the factors that precipitate men’s entree into anti-violence activism. The most recent iteration of this work – the Gender Equitable Men project – examines socioecological and lifecourse factors that predict gender equitable attitudes and behaviors among men in the U.S., as well as how these attitudes and behaviors are protective against the use of violence. Dr. Casey is also a member of the Interpersonal Violence on Commuter Campuses research group, which is examining how models for sexual violence response and prevention can be adapted from residential to commuter campus contexts.
Sara Curran is director of the UW’s Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology. Recently, Sara was selected to join the Executive Council of UW President Ana Mari Cauce’s new Population Health Initiative. This exciting endeavor provides an outstanding opportunity to amplify UW’s substantial health research, training, and applications across the entire campus on behalf of local and global healthy outcomes. She investigates how social contexts, social categories and social structures of power and hierarchies shape human behavior and how human behavior and human interactions reshape social contexts, social categories and social structures. Sara focus these general investigations around migration, gender, family, demographics and ecological well-being in developing country settings, primarily in Southeast Asia and the U.S. Her methodological approaches include quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods, and program evaluation.
Stewart Tolnay’s recent research has focused on two broad topics: (1) the Great Migration of U.S. southerners to the North and West and (2) the history of racial violence in the American South. His work on the Great Migration was supported by grants from NICHD and NSF and has been published in highly regarded journals such as the American Sociological Review, Social Forces, Demography, Social Science Research, and American Journal of Sociology, as well as in his book The Bottom Rung: African American Family Life on Southern Farms (University of Illinois Press, 1999) which received the Otis Dudley Duncan Book Award from the Population Section of the American Sociological Association. Tolnay’s research on the Great Migration has led to important new findings, some of which contradicted conventional wisdom regarding the phenomenon. For example, his research (along with collaborators Trent Alexander, Suzanne Eichenlaub, Katie Genadek, Christine Leibbrand, and Catherine Massey) reveals minimal economic returns to first- and second-generation migrants. Tolnay’s second area of recent research extended his earlier collaboration with E.M. Beck on the environmental correlates of the intensity of southern lynching by exploiting Beck’s new confirmed inventory of threatened lynchings. The findings from that line of work have appeared in the American Journal of Sociology and Social Science History. In a closely related project, and with support from the National Science Foundation, Tolnay and Amy Kate Bailey successfully linked roughly 1,000 lynch victims (approximately 45% of all named victims) to their records in the original enumerators’ manuscripts from the census that immediately preceded their deaths. This linkage allowed the first description of the personal characteristics of a large sample of lynch victims. This new, linked dataset served as the empirical basis for Bailey’s and Tolnay’s award winning book, Lynched: The Victims of Southern Mob Violence (University of North Carolina Press, 2015) as well as for articles in the American Sociological Review and Historical Methods. Very recently, Tolnay has drawn from his academic research on these general topics to write his first novel, Less Than Righteous (Kindle Direct Publishing, 2020: https://www.amazon.com/author/stewarttolnay
Kyle Crowder’s research focuses on the dynamics and consequences of residential stratification. Under this broad umbrella, a central focus of his most recent work has been on the micro-level residential processes shaping persistent patterns of residential segregation and environmental inequality. His research provides insights into racial and ethnic differences in the likelihood of moving out of, and into, neighborhoods characterized by varying levels of population diversity, socioeconomic disadvantage, and physical pollution; the ways in which these disparate mobility processes are shaped by differences in individual- and family-level characteristics, as well as the broader economic, social, and demographic context of residential markets; and the repercussions of these mobility patterns for group differences in access to residential resources. His work also assesses the effects of these neighborhood conditions on individual outcomes, including educational attainment and adolescent development. In the last ten years he has published work on these topics in a number of top outlets, including the American Sociological Review, the American Journal of Sociology, Social Science Research, Social Forces, Demography, Journal of Marriage and the Family, and Population Research and Policy Review. Crowder is currently involved in several ongoing projects related to these themes. With Liam Downey (University of Colorado), he is utilizing data from a variety of sources and rapidly advancing techniques of spatial analysis to provide the first multi-level analyses of environmental inequality, examining the relative influences of racially-differentiated migration patterns and decisions related to the siting of pollution points on racial and ethnic differences in exposure to environmental hazards. This project has received support from NICHD. With Matt Hall (University of Illinois – Chicago) and Stewart Tolnay (University of Washington), Crowder is also assessing how emerging patterns of immigrant settlement have reshaped processes of residential mobility for native-born householders, and how these patterns of mobility vary across traditional and newer immigrant destinations. An important aspect of this and other work by Crowder is the move beyond the tendency in past research to treat neighborhoods as isolated geographic islands, detached from the broader spatial structures in which they are located, to examine the influence of conditions in surrounding neighborhoods on individual outcomes. In a related project, also funded by NICHD, Crowder and Scott South (SUNY-Albany) are examining the effects of metropolitan social, political, and economic conditions on patterns of mobility between increasingly diverse neighborhoods.
Steven Goodreau’s research has two related themes: how does the complex biobehavioral ecology of HIV produce disparities in disease burden within and between populations; and how can we make more statistically sound use of social network data to understand the structure of populations and the flow of infections or other entities within them? Since joining the UW faculty seven years ago, he has published on these topics in Demography, AIDS, the Journal of the American Statistical Association, Genetics, Social Networks, the Journal of Infectious Disease, AIDS and Behavior, and eight others. Goodreau currently has five ongoing projects. The first, part of NIH’s Modeling Prevention Packages Program (MP3), aims to identify ways to better package and target HIV prevention interventions for men who have sex with men (MSM) in the Americas. Within this large multidisciplinary team, Goodreau is director of the modeling group, which is analyzing data on sexual behavior, demography, testing, and treatment among MSM in the US, Peru and Brazil; and using these data to parameterize dynamic HIV transmission network models to explore the potential impact of a host of biological and behavioral intervention packages. The second project, funded by the Gates Foundation, entails extending this analysis to MSM in India and Kenya, to begin developing a more refined comparative understanding of the nature of MSM HIV epidemics globally. The third project, Metromates, integrates behavioral data on post-HIV-diagnosis behavior change among MSM with virological data on acute infection into network models to explore the potential impact of different HIV testing strategies on reduction in risk behavior at the point when men are most infectious. The fourth project, just beginning, extends the work that the Social Network Modeling Group (also including Martina Morris at UW; Mark Handcock at UCLA, Carter Butts at UC-Irvine, and Dave Hunter at Penn State) have done over the past decade on developing user-friendly statistically grounded models and tools for social network analysis. The group’s current R packages (www.statnetproject.org) will be expanded to incorporate additional dynamics, forms of missing data, and epidemic modeling tools; the project also has a strong emphasis on providing training in these tools. The final project, A Kenya Free of AIDS (Martina Morris, PI), is a capacity-building grant for HIV prevention in Kenya; Goodreau’s role is to train African scholars in epidemic modeling so as to be better consumers of the literature that plays a major role in determining prevention and care priorities in sub-Saharan Africa, using a variety of novel pedagogical approaches that he and Dr. Morris have developed.
Robert Plotnick has pursued a broad line of research on issues at the intersection of family demography and U.S. poverty. One set of studies examined the determinants of non-marital childbearing and it relationship to child support enforcement, young women’s human capital, and adolescent expectations and desires about marriage and parenthood. These studies appeared in the Journal of Labor Economics, American Sociological Review, Journal of Family Issues, Journal of Human Resources, the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Family Planning Perspectives, the Journal of Adolescence and Journal of Marriage and the Family. His analysis of the trends and causes of poverty and the effects of antipoverty policies appeared in Oxford Handbook of the Economics of Poverty. Related earlier work appeared in Progress Against Poverty: A Review of the 1964-1974 Decade, Journal of Economic Literature, Social Service Review, Public Policy, Policy Studies Journal and The Child Welfare Challenge: Policy, Practice and Research, a textbook for courses in child welfare. His study of whether children from welfare families obtain less schooling appeared in Demography. His study (with Jennifer Romich and Matthew Dunbar) of highway tolls’ financial impact on low-income families appeared in the Journal of Urban Affairs. Plotnick was the lead editor of Old Assumptions, New Realities: Ensuring Economic Security for Working Families in the 21st Century, published by the Russell Sage Foundation in 2011. The book argues that the demographic and economic assumptions that underlay the core U.S. welfare state programs adopted 40 to 75 years ago do not mirror the current realities of the labor market, family structure, and family behavior that today’s working families face. The chapters draw on this premise to re-evaluate existing social welfare programs and consider new policies that could better promote economic security for today’s working families. His most recent research, in collaboration with members of the Seattle Minimum Wage Study, examines the effect of Seattle’s minimum wage ordinance on labor market outcomes.
Jennie Romich is a Professor of Social Welfare at the UW School of Social Work and faculty director of the West Coast Poverty Center. She studies resources and economic well-being in families with an emphasis on low-income workers, household budgets, and families’ interactions with public policy. Her recent projects include research into effective marginal tax rates created by means-tested benefit schedules and the tax system; an investigation of income of families involved with the child welfare system; and mixed-method evaluations of the Seattle Paid Safe and Sick Time Ordinance and $15 minimum wage. She co-leads the national effort on “Reducing Extreme Economic Inequality” for the American Academy of Social Work & Social Welfare’s Grand Challenges Initiative and co-chairs a national research network on “Poverty, Employment, and Self-Sufficiency” through the Collaborative of U.S. Poverty Centers.