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
| Collaborate with CACHE to Host Your Code and Data | June 10th, 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, |
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| Acolin Publishes Cross-Disciplinary Framework for Addressing Adolescent and Young Adult Climate Distress | June 10th, 2026 |
In a recent article published in PLOS Climate, CSDE Affiliate Jessica Acolin (Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences) and co-authors present a framework for addressing adolescent and young adult mental health and distress related to climate change. The framework was developed through qualitative focus groups with experts who offered disciplinary perspectives across public health, epidemiology, community-based organizations, and clinical mental health practice. Three interdisciplinary themes emerged: Knowledge Generation (increasing scientific knowledge about the causes, |
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| Sutton Shows Social Influencers Can Reduce Infection Burden and Modify Epidemic Lag in Group-Structured Populations | June 10th, 2026 |
In a new article in Royal Society Open Science, CSDE External Affiliate Aja Sutton (Population Research Center at Portland State University) with co-authors Adam Z. Reynolds (University of New Mexico), Matthew A. Turner (Stanford University), and James Holland Jones (Stanford University) examine how (digital) social influencers can modify epidemics by affecting social learning of health-protective behaviors in group-structured populations. Using agent-based models that incorporate both small protective and anti-protective nudges from social influencers into an epidemic scenario, |
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| Swanson Analyzes Racial Profiling in Washington State Patrol Traffic Stops | June 10th, 2026 |
CSDE External Affiliate David Swanson (Distinguished Professor Emeritus, UC Riverside) authored a piece in NW Citizen analyzing racial disparities in Washington State Patrol (WSP) traffic stops from 2022–2024, using odds ratios applied to WSP Traffic Stop Demographic Report data. Black drivers faced roughly twice the odds of being stopped compared to White drivers in total traffic contacts across all three years, with considerably higher odds for criminal felony contacts and low-discretion searches. |
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| TADA-BSSR Trainee Summit in Little Rock, Arkansas | June 4th, 2026 |
In May, the Data Science and Demography Training (DSDT) fellows travelled to Little Rock, Arkansas for the NIH Training in Advanced Data Analytics for Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (TADA-BSSR) Trainee Summit hosted by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. This was the first time in more than two years that trainees from the different sites were able to meet in person. This year’s meeting focused on leveraging our in-person meeting to “do the things we cannot do virtually,” with the overall goal of increasing awareness of activities at all TADA-BSSR sites and to enhance cross-site networking. |
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| Colburn, Wang, Curran, Thomas and CSDE Team Awarded Spot in Eviction Data Research Network | June 4th, 2026 |
CSDE Affiliates Gregg Colburn (Real Estate), Vince Wang (Real Estate), Sara Curran (Director, CSDE), and CSDE External Affiliate Tim Thomas (UC Berkeley), along with Pelle Tracey (iSchool), have been invited to join the Eviction Data Research Network. Their project will advance statewide data collection around housing eviction. They will be joined by Washington State’s Attorney General’s office and additional UW colleagues and CSDE Affiliates Drew Messamore (Sociology), |
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| Hajat Examines How Race, Gender, and Precarious Employment Shape Educational Returns on Depression in Older Adults | June 4th, 2026 |
In a new article in Aging & Mental Health, CSDE Affiliate Anjum Hajat (Epidemiology, CSDE Development Core Director) and co-authors used data from the Health and Retirement Study (1992–2022) to examine how the mental health benefits of education vary by race, gender, and precarious employment (PE) among older adults. While high school education was generally associated with lower depressive symptoms, Black and Hispanic women with a high school education did not have lower depressive symptoms than non-Hispanic white men without one. |
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| Eisenberg, Morales, Martinez, and Guttmannova Research on Rural Latinx Young Adults Featured by Population Reference Bureau | June 4th, 2026 |
The Population Reference Bureau recently highlighted research by CSDE Affiliates Nicole Eisenberg (Social Work), Leo Morales (Medicine/Latino Center for Health), Griselda Martinez (Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences), and Katarina Guttmannova (Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences) on how Latino Youth in rural America navigate the path to adulthood. At the end of their survey of Latino young people (surveyed at age 21 and 26) from two rural Midwestern towns, |
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| Curran Quoted in KING5 News Story on Seattle’s Population Growth and International Migration | June 4th, 2026 |
CSDE Director Sara Curran was recently quoted in a KING5 news story reporting that Seattle posted the nation’s fifth-largest numeric population gain, adding more than 11,500 residents between July 2024 and July 2025. International migration was a key driver of this growth. Curran attributed the surge in international migration to western Washington to labor demand, especially in the tech industry during 2023–2025. This news feature was also highlighted by UW Today. |
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| Wang Investigates Climate Action by North American Community Land Trusts | May 28th, 2026 |
In a new article in the Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, CSDE Affiliate Vince Wang (Real Estate) explores whether community land trusts (CLTs) can systematically enable equitable climate action. Wang and co-author Jason Simpson Spicer surveyed all CLTs in Canada and the United States. A majority of CLTs engage in climate action, with mitigation efforts more prevalent than adaptation, and their rate of action cannot be explained by climate hazard exposure alone. |
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