…Spanish-speaking households in navigating Camden’s school choice eco-system can impact policy. – We’ve worked with the South Jersey Institute for Population Health (SJIPH) and will be launching a partnership formation award this Fall that recognizes and funds the work that community organizations put into partnering with academics at Rutgers University-Camden…
Affiliated Scholar Lori Minnite was quoted in a recent New Yorker article, “The Voter-Fraud Myth”: Lorraine Minnite, a public-policy professor at Rutgers, collated decades of electoral data for her 2010 book, “The Myth of Voter Fraud,” and came up with some striking statistics. In 2005, for example, the federal government…
…vacant properties into homes for potential buyers is being formed. Prentiss Danzler, Ph.D. candidate Three graduate students from the Department of Public Policy and Administration here at Rutgers – Camden are spearheading a pilot program under the direction of Mayor Jim Maley of Collingswood, New Jersey. Zachary Wood and Prentiss…
…professional, affluent, better educated. And in a minority city dominated by Hispanics and African-Americans, the large percentage of whites living in the Victor stands out like a snowstorm in July. Resident Stephen Danley is a professor of public policy at nearby Rutgers University-Camden. He expected a certain amount of heat…
Please join us for our next seminar: “Does Concentration Worsen Poverty? The Philadelphia Case” Lori Minnite, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Department of Public Policy and Administration Rutgers University-Camden Friday, December 12, 2014 12:15pm – 1:30pm Faculty Lounge, 3rd floor Armitage Hall Lunch will be served Scholars of political incorporation understand that…