CSDE Affiliate Theresa Rocha Beardall (Sociology) authored a chapter, titled “‘Imperialism without Imperialists’ and the Settler-Colonial Logics of Reservation Policing” in the edited volume, Police and State Crime in the Americas. Growing awareness of U.S. police violence has sparked important discussions that link state violence and the nation’s settler-colonial origins, emphasizing the use of law enforcement to control racially marginalized groups. Yet, the enduring impact of settler-colonial logics of carcerality and elimination on the lives of Indigenous Peoples in the U.S., commonly known as American Indians under federal law, remains underexplored. This chapter examines how and why the social construction of American Indians as othered and deviant is used by the settler-state to assert control of Native bodies, lands, and jurisdiction through reservation policing.
*New* Issue of the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Read Volume 50, Issue 4 here!
*New* IPUMS Data (Global Health, NHGIS, CPS)
IPUMS released updates for its for its NHGIS and CPS datasets. It also released the IPUMS DHS Climate Change and Health Research Hub, which will help researchers study the relationships between climate change and population health. Read more about each update in the full story!
IPUMS GLOBAL HEALTHIPUMS DHS is pleased to announce a new resource to help researchers illuminate the relationship between climate change and population health: the IPUMS DHS Climate Change and Health Research Hub. The Research Hub will showcase techniques to combine spatial data with IPUMS survey data, making it easier to add environmental context to population health resources. It will include both conceptual content and technical tutorials that demonstrate spatial processing techniques in R.
IPUMS NHGISNHGIS has released its fourth set of GIS boundary files for 1980 census blocks. This release adds 55 metropolitan areas, including St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Tampa-St. Petersburg, and Nassau-Suffolk, and provides full coverage of New England. Our 1980 block boundaries now cover all or part of 148 metro areas across 46 states, including the top 20 largest metro areas by 1980 population.
IPUMS CPSIPUMS CPS.
The January 2024 Basic Monthly Sample data are now available through*New* Attend the Inaugural Lunch-and-Learn for UW’s New Center for Disaster Resilient Communities
*New* Webinar on The Humanitarian Crisis in Gaza and Public Health Responses
*New* Call for Applications to Attend the Economic Mobility Fellowship Program (Due 4/3/24)
The Institute for Research on Poverty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is pleased to announce the Economic Mobility Fellowship Program, a federal government-university partnership that seeks to broaden the pipeline of program administration, policy and research staff working on issues of poverty, inequality, and economic mobility in the United States. The Institute for Research on Poverty is calling for applications from individuals who have recently completed/or are about to complete a master’s degree for a full-time fellowship for 2024–2025 with an anticipated start date in summer 2024. The fellowship is for one year with the potential of renewing for a second year. The fellowship is contingent on the availability of funding. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis with a final deadline of April 3, 2024.
Announcing the next round of the Royalty Research Fund (RRF) (Due 3/4/24)
- In disciplines for which external funding opportunities are minimal.
- For faculty who are junior in rank.
- In cases where RRF funding may provide unique opportunities to increase applicants’ competitiveness for subsequent funding.
Event on Fostering Connections in AI and Health (3/5/24)
The Population Health Initiative is co-hosting a winter quarter Open Space-style event, “Fostering Connections in AI and Health,” on Tuesday, March 5, 2024 from 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. in the UW Husky Union Building (HUB), room 145. The goal of this gathering is to help facilitate new collaborations between UW faculty researchers who are interested in applying generative AI and large language models to pressing health challenges. Those who attend will set the agenda for discussion, offering to convene discussions on possible topics or projects where collaboration is sought. The formal program will be followed by a more informal networking lunch. See the event poster and RSVP at this link to attend.
CSDE Welcomes 5 New Research Affiliates!
CSDE is pleased to introduce five of our new UW Research Affiliates. Jade d’Alpoim Guedes (Assistant Professor, Anthropology, UW) is an environmental archaeologist and ethnobiologist who employs an interdisciplinary research program to understand how humans adapted their foraging practices and agricultural strategies to new environments and have developed resilience in the face of climatic and social change. Jing Xu (Affiliate Assistant Professor, Anthropology, UW) is an anthropologist and a developmental scientist, whose work uses interdisciplinary and mixed methods approaches to examine child development and family wellbeing in diverse populations and cultural contexts. Aditya Ramesh (Assistant Professor, History, UW) is a historian. His work revolves largely around environmental history, agrarian history, and the history of science, technology, and medicine in South Asia. Kavita Dattani (Assistant Professor, Gender, Women, & Sexuality Studies, UW) is a feminist researcher of digital technologies and data, whose work seeks to uncover the ways in which data-driven digital technologies are enabling new forms of violence and marginality and the potentials for more progressive data futures. Lesley Steinman (Research Scientist, Health Systems and Population Health, UW) has spent the past 20 years partnering with diverse stakeholders to conduct community-engaged research and practice to improve health promotion and disease prevention and management for populations facing inequities in access to quality care and health outcomes. Learn more about these new affiliates in the full story!
Jade d’Alpoim Guedes – Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Washington. Jade d’Alpoim Guedes is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Washington. Dr. D’Alpoim Guedes is an environmental archaeologist and ethnobiologist who employs an interdisciplinary research program to understand how humans adapted their foraging practices and agricultural strategies to new environments and have developed resilience in the face of climatic and social change. She employs a variety of different methodologies in her research including archaeobotany, paleoclimate reconstruction and computational modeling. Dr. d’Alpoim Guedes’ primary region of focus is Asia, where she has worked extensively in China, but also has interests in Nepal, Thailand and Pakistan. Dr. d’Alpoim Guedes also works closely with crop scientists to examine the potential of landraces of traditional crops such as millet, wheat, barley and buckwheat for modern agricultural systems.
Jing Xu – Affiliate Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Washington. Jing Xu is currently an Affiliate Assistant Professor at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Washington and a Wenner-Gren Foundation Hunt Postdoctoral Fellow. She received her Ph.D. in anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis and completed postdoctoral work in developmental psychology at the University of Washington. Her work uses interdisciplinary and mixed methods approaches to examine child development and family wellbeing in diverse populations and cultural contexts. As an anthropologist and a developmental scientist, her research covers various lifestages and populations spanning multiple geographic regions and historical periods, i.e., contemporary China, America and Europe, Cold-War era Taiwan. Her latest project is relevant to migration studies, examining differences in developmental patterns across migrant and non-migrant families in three countries (The Republic of Congo, the U.S., and the UK).
Aditya Ramesh – Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of Washington. Aditya Ramesh joined the UW History Department in Winter 2024, from the University of Manchester, where he was a Presidential fellow in Environmental History. Previously, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine at the University of Manchester. His work revolves largely around environmental history, agrarian history, and the history of science, technology, and medicine in South Asia.
Kavita Dattani – Assistant Professor, Department of Gender, Women, & Sexuality Studies, University of Washington. Kavita Dattani is a feminist researcher of digital technologies and data. She received her PhD in Human Geography from Queen Mary University of London in 2022. Broadly, Kavita’s work seeks to uncover the ways in which data-driven digital technologies are enabling new forms of violence and marginality and the potentials for more progressive data futures. Kavita’s research has spanned different kinds of data-driven technologies: Biometric and Financial Technologies, Digital Dating Apps, and Digital Labour Platforms.
Lesley Steinman – Research Scientist, Department of Health Systems and Population Health, University of Washington. Lesley Steinman is a Research Scientist in the UW School of Public Health’s (SPH) Department of Health Systems and Population Health, based at a community-academic CDC-funded Prevention Research Center. For the past 20 years, she has partnered with diverse stakeholders (community members, practitioners, organizations, policymakers) to conduct community-engaged research and practice to improve health promotion and disease prevention and management for populations facing inequities in access to quality care and health outcomes. Much of this collaborative work has focused on disseminating, adapting, implementing, scaling, and sustaining the PEARLS program, a home/community-based collaborative care model that builds capacity among front-line social service providers to improve depression care access and outcomes among historically marginalized older adults, including low-income older communities of color, linguistically diverse communities, and rural communities. Lesley brings a range of community-engaged D&I research and practice methods; health equity, mental health, social connectedness subject matter expertise; and is an experienced trainer, partner, and practice coach translating research into practice.
These affiliates bring a wealth of knowledge and unique approaches that enhance our community of demographers and collectively advances population science. We look forward to supporting each of them as they pursue their research. You can learn more about their individual research interests by visiting their affiliate pages, linked above.
If you are interested in becoming an affiliate or you know of someone who should become one, you can invite them to do so by directing them to this page. Affiliate applications are reviewed quarterly, by CSDE’s Executive Committee.
On Recognition, Caring, and Dementia: Taylor’s Essay Featured on This American Life
CSDE Affiliate Dr. Janelle Taylor (Anthropology, University of Toronto) was featured on This American Life, a radio program by Chicago Public Media and hosted by Ira Glass. In Act 3 of Episode #823 “The Question Trap,” Taylor reads an essay adapted from an article that she published in Medical Anthropology Quarterly in 2008, titled “On Recognition, Caring, and Dementia“. In that article, she wrote about what she had learned in the course of her mother’s decline into dementia, reflecting on the question people often asked: whether her mother “recognized” her. She took this question as an entry point to explore the meaning of recognition for care. Borrowing a phrase from her (by then severely impaired) mother, the article proposes that we should be asking a more compassionate question, which is “how can we best strive to ‘keep the cares together’?” Learn more in the episode from This American Life (here) and in Taylor’s article.