In the News

  1. September 28, 2022
    • Alexa Eisenberg

    “We can celebrate Detroit’s legacy as a city of homeowners while also making clear that being a majority-renter city is not a point of shame. The real shame lies in our government’s failure to enact and implement policies that could guarantee equal rights to safe and affordable housing to people who don’t own property,” wrote Alexa Eisenberg, a Poverty Solutions postdoctoral research fellow.

    Bridge Detroit
  2. September 28, 2022
    • Evan Caminker

    “State justices have a central stake in this case because, in our federalist system, they typically have the final say over the meaning of state law,” said Evan Caminker, professor of law, on a brief filed by state chief justices that urges the U.S. Supreme Court to reject a legal theory pressed by Republicans that would give state legislatures power to set federal election rules unconstrained by state constitutions.

    The New York Times
  3. September 27, 2022
    • Will Thomas

    “If Trump wanted to argue that some accounting decision was harmless instead of malicious, he might have already passed up the opportunity when he decided to stay silent,” said Will Thomas, assistant professor of business law, on the former president’s refusal to answer questions in a deposition with New York Attorney General Letitia James, who is suing Donald Trump for fraudulently overvaluing his assets by billions of dollars.

    The Associated Press
  4. September 27, 2022
    • Paula Lantz

    “These kinds of interventions are often oversold to get the political buy-in and to get the resources by saying they’re going to be cost neutral. My biggest worry is that there could be very positive impacts of what they’re doing that don’t show up in a bottom line,” said Paula Lantz, professor of public policy and public health, on California’s plan to connect low-income patients with social services, expanded benefits and housing.

    National Public Radio
  5. September 27, 2022
    • Nate Sanders

    “Ants are the movers and shakers of ecosystems. Knowing anything about them helps us understand how ecosystems are put together and how they work,” said Nate Sanders, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, commenting on a new census that shows there are 20 quadrillion ants worldwide, or 2.5 million for every living human.

    The New York Times
  6. September 26, 2022
    • Cheng Li

    Research by Cheng Li, assistant professor of climate and space sciences and engineering, and colleagues suggests that a cyclone at the north pole of Jupiter surrounded by eight smaller cyclones arranged in a polygonal pattern is sustained by an “anticyclonic ring” of winds that blow in the opposite direction. “Nature is revealing new physics regarding fluid motions and how giant planet atmospheres work,” he said.

    VICE Magazine
  7. September 26, 2022
    • Alexandra Murphy

    Roughly 1 in 4 American adults lacks consistent access to transportation, according to research by Alexandra Murphy, assistant professor of sociology, and colleagues. “The percentage of people who are transportation insecure is about double those who are food insecure,” she said. “More than half of people who are living below the poverty line in the U.S. are experiencing transportation insecurity.”

    WEMU Radio
  8. September 26, 2022
    • J. Alexander Navarro

    “Declaring a pandemic over is a little different than declaring a local epidemic over,” said J. Alexander Navarro, assistant director of the Center for the History of Medicine. “I think we were all a little bit shocked when President Biden said what he said on ’60 Minutes,’ but I also think that in many ways, he was reflecting what many Americans already think and feel.”

    CNN
  9. September 23, 2022
    • Parker Finn

    “Bringing these resources to the region can help manufacturers invest in new technologies, develop their organization and plan for the future,” said Parker Finn, assistant director of the Economic Growth Institute, which plans to create a $5.3 million advanced mobility supply chain transformation center to support small and medium-sized manufacturers as they transition to the electric vehicle market.

    DBusiness Magazine
  10. September 23, 2022
    • Susan Woolford

    Nearly two-thirds of parents say their child is self-conscious about their appearance, according to research by Susan Woolford, associate professor of pediatrics: “It’s developmentally normal for adolescents and teens to experience some insecurities, but if it’s interfering with their ability to enjoy social interactions or other activities, they may need help.”

    Fortune