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CSDE News & Events

With over 100 Research Affiliates from various disciplines under its wing, CSDE proudly supports a broad spectrum of demographic research. Check out some of our scholars’ accomplishments and news coverage below.

CSDE Research Highlights

CSDE Announces Charles and Josephine Hirschman Award for Student Research (05/22/26) May 14th, 2026

CSDE is thrilled to announce the Charles and Josephine Hirschman Award for student research. CSDE students may apply for up to $2,000 in funds to directly support a research project. Funds may support activities such as the cost of conducting fieldwork, data purchases, the hiring of a translator or transcriber, or participant rewards in surveys. Be creative! All funds must be spent during the 2026-27 academic year and may not be used to pay tuition or your own salary.

Collaborate with CACHE to Host Your Code and Data May 14th, 2026

Have you recently finished a project or published a paper that integrates social and health science data with disaster, climate or environmental data? Would you like to share your code on CACHE? Code can be in any language and will be reviewed and run by peers (CACHE post-docs and staff) before making it public. CACHE welcomes code that uses single data sets of interests (e.g., social or health data that ask about disasters or environmental,

UW Recognizes Hajat’s Mentorship with Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award May 14th, 2026

CSDE Affiliate Anjum Hajat (Epidemiology) has been named a recipient of the 2026 UW Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award, This award. recognizes a faculty member who excels at the intense one-on-one teaching that is the hallmark of graduate study. First bestowed in 1999, the award honors the memory of Marsha L. Landolt, who served as dean of the Graduate School from 1996 to 2004. Congratulations, Dr. Hajat!

Spiker and Otten Recognized with UW’s Distinguished Teaching Award May 14th, 2026
When: 05/13/2026

UW jointly awarded Sarah Collier (Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences), CSDE Affiliate Jennifer Otten (Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences), CSDE Affiliate Marie Spiker (Epidemiology), the university’s 2026 Distinguished Teaching Award. The Collier-Otten-Spiker Food Systems Teaching Team was recognized for their reflective teaching practice with experimentation and refinement over time; commitment to inclusive teaching and mentoring; and dedication to creating deep and transformative learning experiences. You can read more about the team’s teaching approach here.

Doll Joins Science Friday Podcast to Discuss New Book on the Gynecological Health Crisis Facing Black Women May 14th, 2026

CSDE Affiliate Kemi M. Doll (Obstetrics & Gynecology) joined an episode of the Science Friday podcast focused on understanding the gynecological health crisis facing Black women. During the episode, Doll discussed her new book, A Terrible Strength: The Hidden Crisis of the Black Womb and Your Survival Guide to Healing, which explores how systemic racism and the normalization of Black women’s pain lead to later diagnoses of uterine cancer and poorer health outcomes for a range of gynecologic conditions including fibroids,

Wong and Co-authors Assess Care Quality by Telehealth Proportion in Veterans Health Administration Primary Care May 14th, 2026

In a recent publication in JAMA Network Open, CSDE Affiliate Edwin Wong (Health Services) and co-authors examined whether the proportion of primary care delivered via telehealth was associated with differences in care quality among 744,599 veterans in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) between 2022 and 2023. Veterans with low or intermediate telehealth use had clinical and quality-of-care outcomes comparable to those receiving only in-person care across most measures, particularly cardiovascular and behavioral health measures.

Marcotte Tests Chatbot Designs for Culturally Tailored Breast Cancer Screening Outreach May 14th, 2026

CSDE Affiliate Leah Marcotte (Medicine) and co-authors, in partnership with Cierra Sisters, recently published an article in Frontiers in Digital Health reporting on a randomized factorial experiment evaluating chatbot designs for breast cancer screening (BCS) outreach. The study tested four conditions with a Black woman persona presented as either a primary care doctor or a breast cancer survivor who used either a direct versus polite communication styles.

Morris and Jones Examine Teachers’ Role in Supporting Racial and Cultural Minority Students’ Belonging Through Extracurriculars May 7th, 2026

CSDE Affiliates Kamryn Morris (Social Work) and Kristian Jones (Social Work) published a new study exploring how teachers support racial and/or cultural minority students’ sense of mattering through extracurricular participation. In semi-structured interviews, teachers described a wide range of activity offerings (e.g. sports, cultural clubs) and characterized their own involvement as ranging from supportive to active participation. Teachers emphasized that extracurriculars enhance students’ sense of mattering by fostering belonging and promoting long-term skills,

Ševčíková and Raftery Develop Age-Adjusted Approach to Forecasting International Net Migration May 7th, 2026

In a new publication in Demography, CSDE Research Scientist Hana Ševčíková, CSDE Affiliate Adrian Raftery (Statistics and Sociology), and Nathan Welch develop a method for forecasting international migration that takes a country’s age structure into account. Drawing on migration data from 1990 to 2020 across the 200 most populous countries, the authors build a statistical model that projects migration rates through 2100. To develop their forecast,

Check-out Other Population Centers! May 7th, 2026

CSDE is a member of the Association of Population Centers (APC). Each year the APC publishes a resource guide about all member centers. You might check it out and see what is happening elsewhere!