A potential voter must incur a number of costs in order to successfully cast an in-person ballot, including the costs associated with…
The U.S. Constitution does not guarantee a right to health care. Yet since 1976, the Supreme Court has held that deliberate indifference to…
After arrest, criminal defendants are often detained before trial to mitigate potential risks to public safety. There is widespread concern…
Institutional reforms often diverge from substantive problems and societal demands that originally prompted reform, raising questions about…
The COVID-19 pandemic dramatically reshaped the labor market, especially for service sector workers. Frontline service sector workers,…
We experimentally test several approaches to increasing the demand for workers with a criminal record on a nationwide staffing platform by…
Can democratic participation reduce inequalities in citizenship produced by policing? We argue that citizen participation in policing…
Why the Supreme Court agrees to hear cases is among the most important topics in judicial politics. However, existing theories have…
People with important evidence-based ideas often struggle to translate data into stories their readers can relate to and understand. And if…
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The United States spends substantially more on health care than most developed countries, yet leaves a greater share of the population…