Recorded Research Webinars

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  Watch our latest Research Webinars!  

The Carsey School of Public Policy is synonymous with applied research that influences legislative policy and helps to maintain an informed public. The Carsey School employs a cadre of leading researchers and policy analysts working in a variety of research fields , including Demography, Vulnerable Populations, Environment and Climate Change, and School Funding, and other areas related to sustainable development.

This research is presented to the public through regularly published briefs and articles and, whenever possible, through online webinars and interviews like those below. Our Research webinars give viewers the opportunity to meet our authors first-hand and to hear them discuss the key findings of their research.


Recent Research Webinars

Community-Based Solar Lending: Bringing Clean Energy to Low-Income Communities

 


Biden’s Victory Due to Increased Support Along the Entire Rural-Urban Continuum

Carsey School of Public Policy Senior Demographer Ken Johnson and UNH Political Science faculty member Dante Scala discuss their recent research brief, which focuses on how Democratic support increasing across the entire rural-urban continuum helped Joe Biden win the 2020 presidential election. Read the Research.

Recorded Research Webinars Organized by Subject Matter

Bringing Clean Energy to Low-Income Communities

Conservative Media Consumers Less Likely to Wear Masks & Less Worried About COVID-19

A new survey of 959 New Hampshire residents, conducted by Carsey School researchers Larry Hamilton and Thomas Safford, confirmed that mask wearing and perceptions of the pandemic’s seriousness vary widely, however, depending on where people get their news. Larry, a senior faculty fellow at the Carsey School and a member of the Master in Public Policy faculty, joins us for a webinar discussing this research, which he co-authored. Larry goes over key policy questions that motivated this research and what the main findings of it where.

Prevention Failures and the Resurgence of Black Lung in Central Appalachia

Aysha Bodenhamer, an Assistant Professor of Sociology with Radford University's College of Humanities and Behavioral Sciences, joined us for a webinar on her research into the resurgence of black lung in the United States’ Appalachia region. Aysha's research generally examines the intersection of energy, environment, and human populations. Listen in as she shares the motivation for her publication, 'Outlaw Operators': Prevention Failures and the Resurgence of Black Lung in Central Appalachia.

What Do We Know About What to Do With Dams?

Carsey School of Public Policy researchers Simone Chapman, Catherine Ashcraft and Larry Hamilton to discuss their latest research, What Do We Know About What to Do With Dams?, which they co-authored along with Kevin Gardner.

Views of a Fast-Moving Pandemic

Join Carsey School Faculty Fellows Thomas Safford and Lawrence Hamilton as they present the findings from their most recent research, Views of a Fast-Moving Pandemic: A Survey of Granite Staters’ Responses to COVID-19.

Biden’s Victory Due to Increased Support Along the Entire Rural-Urban Continuum

Carsey School of Public Policy Senior Demographer Ken Johnson and UNH Political Science faculty member Dante Scala discuss their recent research brief, which focuses on how Democratic support increasing across the entire rural-urban continuum helped Joe Biden win the 2020 presidential election. Read the Research.

Voting and Attitudes Along the Red Rural–Blue Urban Continuum

University of New Hampshire researchers Ken Johnson and Dante Scala discuss their recent research brief, Voting and Attitudes Along the Red Rural–Blue Urban Continuum, which examines and confirms their earlier analysis of the 2016 presidential election and demonstrate how voting patterns and political attitudes vary across the spectrum of urban and rural areas.

Is Rural America Failing or Succeeding? Maybe Both

All of the growth in the share of the population that lives in metropolitan areas in the past 50 years occurred because nonmetropolitan counties have been transformed into metropolitan counties. This calls into question the commonplace narrative of urban growth and rural decline occurring through an emptying out of rural America. Research authors Ken Johnson, a Senior Demographer with the Carsey School, and Dan Lichter, a sociologist with the College of Human Ecology at Cornell University, discuss their research, Is Rural America Failing or Succeeding? Maybe Both, and share some of their major findings.

Health Conditions and an Older Population Increase COVID-19 Risks in Rural America

Carsey School Demographer Ken Johnson reports that the rural population is at higher risk from COVID-19 because it is older and has higher rates of pre-existing health conditions. Rural areas currently have lower COVID-19 case and death rates, but these rates are rising faster than in urban areas. Nearly 32 percent of the rural counties at high risk from COVID-19 still have relatively few cases and deaths, but as the pandemic continues to spread these counties are in jeopardy, and the risk to rural populations is growing.

U.S. Fertility Rates & Births Continue to Diminish

National Center for Health Statistics data for 2019 show the lowest fertility rates on record and just 3,746,000 births—the fewest since 1985. Listen in as Carsey School Senior Demographer Ken Johnson discusses what this means for the U.S. population.

Why People Move to and Stay in New Hampshire

Ken Johnson, senior demographer with the Carsey School of Public Policy, and Kristine Bundschuh, a 2018 Nordblom Fellow with Carsey, discuss their recent research brief, titled Why People Move to and Stay in New Hampshire.

An Older Population Increases Estimated COVID-19 Death Rates in Rural America

Carsey School Senior Demographer Ken Johnson discusses his latest research brief, An Older Population Increases Estimated COVID-19 Death Rates in Rural America.

New Hampshire’s Changing Demographics and its Impact on Politics and the Primary

Join Carsey School Senior Demographer Ken Johnson and UNH Professor of Political Science Dante Scala as they discuss the results of their latest research on how New Hampshire’s changing demographics have also resulted in changes to the state’s political landscape.

Deaths Exceeded Births in Nearly Half of U.S. Counties Last Year

Carsey School Senior Demographer Ken Johnson discusses his latest research brief, Deaths Exceeded Births in Nearly Half of U.S. Counties Last Year, which found that fewer births and more deaths has reduced population growth to a 100-year low.

August 2020 Update on the COVID-19 Economic Crisis: By State Jobs Report

Carsey Director Michael Ettlinger and Policy Analyst Jordan Hensley provide an update on the economy and employment data from the COVID-19 Economic Crisis: By State report. The latest numbers show that employment levels are well down from their February levels, and that states with the highest cases of COVID-19 are seeing the worst job growth.

Update on the State-by-State Jobs Data

Carsey School of Public Policy Director Michael Ettlinger returns to discuss the latest data for the report COVID-19 Economic Crisis, along with report co-author and Carsey School Policy Analyst Jordan Hensley and Carsey Research Assistant Professor Jessica Carson.

Research Into the Economic Impact of COVID-19

For this week's Carsey Roundup, Carsey's Director of Academic Programs Dan Bromberg interviews Carsey School Director Michael Ettlinger regarding his recent research into the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Inequities of Job Loss and Recovery Amid the COVID-19 Pandemic

Corey Sparks and Rogelio Saenz of UTSA – The University of Texas at San Antonio joined the Carsey School to discuss their research into inequities in job loss and recovery over the last several months of the pandemic. Their recent research brief highlights the wide variations in unemployment and the level of job loss over the last several months that have taken place to date across the nation’s demographic groups that have historically suffered disparities in the workforce, including persons of color, women, and immigrants.

Filtered Through the Lens of a Camera

Join Daniel Bromberg, nationally known BWC researcher at UNH’s Carsey School of Public Policy, and Étienne Charbonneau, Canada Research Chair in Comparative Public Management at École Nationale d'Administration Publique, as they examine the complex relationship between BWCs and policing and present recently collected data about citizen support and perceptions surrounding BWC practices. This webinar was hosted by UNH Alumni.

Trusting Scientists More Than the Government

Carsey School Faculty Fellow Lawrence Hamilton sits down for a discussion and Q&A about his latest research brief, Trusting Scientists More Than the Government – New Hampshire Perceptions of the Pandemic.

Research into Public Trust of Law Enforcement in an Age of Video Surveillance

Michele Holt-Shannon, Director of New Hampshire Listens, sits down with Dan Bromberg, Director of Academics at Carsey, to discuss his research into police body-worn cameras and how law enforcement trust in citizens, the media, and fellow officers can affect a willingness to share police video footage with the public and how his research relates to recent U.S. events.

The Fragile Relationship Between Police Officers and Citizens in an Age of Video Surveillance

Dan Bromberg, Director of Academics for the Carsey School of Public Policy, discusses his research into police body-worn cameras and how law enforcement trust in citizens, the media, and fellow officers can affect a willingness to share police video footage with the public.

New Data Show One-in-Six Children Were Poor Before COVID-19 Pandemic

Carsey School researchers Jessica Carson and Sarah Boege discuss their latest brief, which examines U.S. Census Bureau data that shows that child poverty levels fell slightly in 2019 from 2018, but that still one in six children lives in poverty. More importantly though, 2019 child poverty declines are likely now outdated due to the COVID-19-related recession, the effects of which may last years. For instance, child poverty had still not yet returned to pre-Great Recession rates from 2007 in all states by 2019, illustrating that recovery in child poverty can be a long process.

COVID-19 Didn’t Create a Child Care Crisis, But Hastened and Inflamed It

Research authors Jess Carson and Marybeth Mattingly join Carsey School Director Michael Ettlinger to discuss their most recent research, COVID-19 Didn’t Create a Child Care Crisis, But Hastened and Inflamed It. As child care programs rapidly closed in the COVID-19 pandemic, the degree to which work is enabled by child care became obvious, particularly for the 14 percent of workers parenting a child under age 6.

Allowing DC Statehood & its Effects on Underrepresented Populations in the US Senate

Michele Holt-Shannon, Director of NH Listens, interviews Michael Ettlinger, Carsey School Director, and Jordan Hensley, Carsey School Policy Analyst, regarding their research into the underrepresentation of Black, Hispanic, and Asian residents in the U.S. Senate and how adding senators from Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico would affect representation in the Senate.

 

Innovation in Food Access Amid the COVID-19 Pandemic

Carsey School researcher Jessica Carson discusses her latest analysis into innovative efforts by government agencies, nonprofit organizations, and volunteer networks in supplying food and food-related support during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Poverty-Reducing Effects of the EITC & Other Safety Nets for Young Parents

Research Assistant Professor Jessica Carson of the Carsey School explores the poverty-reducing effects of key federal safety net programs among 18-24 year old (“young adult”) parents.

Free & Reduced-Price Lunch Eligibility by New Hampshire State Legislative District

Authors Sarah Boege and Jessica Carson translate New Hampshire free and reduced-price lunch eligibility data from the school level to the state House of Representatives legislative district level. Their new research helps with understanding the distribution of low-income families across the state and the extent to which child nutrition programs are especially relevant in their districts.

Carsey's Involvement in the NH School Funding Solution

The Carsey School's Bruce Mallory, Senior Advisor to New Hampshire Listens, and Jordan Hensley, Policy Analyst at Carsey, discuss the School's involvement in the search for an effective school funding model in New Hampshire. Listen in as Bruce and Jordan talk about how the Carsey School joined with the NH Commission to Study School Funding on this initiative and what those efforts have looked like to date.

Learning the Skills to Communicate Research

Learn about the intersection of Research and Communication in a conversation with Dan Bromberg, Director of Academic Programs, and Jessica Carson, Research Assistant Professor at Carsey, as they discuss what it takes to conduct research and communicate that research to a wider audience.

Collaborative Governance Simulation Teaching at Carsey

Carsey's Academic Director Dan Bromberg sits down with Carsey School faculty member Carolyn Arcand to discuss the use of collaborative teaching simulations in public policy and administration classrooms and how students can learn from them while having fun.

Recent Carsey School Research Publications

Recent Carsey School Research News

Image of Covid-19 virus magnified.

Carsey School Responds to COVID-19

Carsey School Responds to COVID-19

New Research and Outreach Activities Related to Pandemic

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A photo of a vendor at the Exeter Farmers Market selling her items to a customer. New UNH research highlights New England consumers’ perspectives of farmers markets with the goal of identifying new strategies for making these and other alternative food markets more viable for farmers and food producers.

Examining Perspectives of New England Farmers Markets

Examining Perspectives of New England Farmers Markets

UNH research studies consumer views on farmers markets and other alternative food networks

Article
An image of a purple census questionnaire with the text "your census, household questionnaire" at the top.

New Study Examines Disproportionately High Food Insufficiency Rates Among LGBTQ+ New Englanders

New Study Examines Disproportionately High Food Insufficiency Rates Among LGBTQ+ New Englanders

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