top of page

Highlighted Publications


Which College Success Interventions Actually Pay for Themselves?
Slaughter and Weiss (2026) examined whether evidence-based community college interventions can “pay for themselves” from the college perspective through added tuition revenue and state funding. They analyzed cost and outcome data from 19 randomized controlled trial interventions and simulated implementation across 857 community colleges in 41 states. The interventions averaged about $2,100 in costs per student but generated only about $200 in new revenue, leaving colleges wit
4 minutes ago


Does Fear of Deportation Affect Victims’ Willingness to Report Crime?
Gonçalves, Jácome, and Weisburst (2026) examined whether immigration enforcement policies reduce public safety by discouraging crime victims from reporting crimes to police. They studied the Secure Communities program, which increased cooperation between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities. The authors used data from the National Crime Victimization Survey, Immigration and Customs Enforcement records, FBI crime data, Census data, and police department re
2 days ago


Do Urban Trees Reduce Heat and Increase Property Values?
Han, Heblich, Timmins, and Zylberberg (2025) examined whether urban trees increase property values and reduce heat, pollution, and energy use in cities. They analyzed detailed land-cover data, satellite temperature records, energy consumption data, pollution measures, and more than 450,000 housing transactions in Toronto between 2007 and 2020. They used the spread of the invasive Emerald Ash Borer beetle, which killed large numbers of ash trees, as a natural experiment to mea
3 days ago


Are Current SNAP Income Cutoffs Too Restrictive to Address Childhood Food Insecurity?
Gabbay et al. (2026) examined whether children living above the standard Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) income eligibility threshold still experience food insecurity. They analyzed data from the 2024 National Survey of Children’s Health, focusing on more than 33 million US children living in households above 200% of the federal poverty level. They found that about 659,000 children in these households experienced food insecurity, with nearly half living betwe
May 15
bottom of page