March 23: Stephanie Moulton, Faculty Director of Research, Ohio State University, presents How Does the Death of a Partner During the COVID-19 Pandemic Affect the Economic Security of the Surviving Older Adult? Evidence From Credit Panel and Labor Force Participation DataĪpril 6: Nicole Hair, Assistant Professor, University of South Carolina, presents COVID-19 Health Disparities and the Economic Security of Families with ChildrenĪpril 13: Dan Sacks or Anita Mukherjee, Wisconsin School of Business, University of Wisconsin- Madison, present Consumption smoothing effects of Medicaid expansionsĪpril 20: Jevay Grooms Assistant Professor, Howard University, and Madelaine L’Esperance, Assistant Professor, University of Alabama, presents Social Security Administration’s Growing Interest in the Child Tax Credit and Other Child Driven Income Support ProgramsĪpril 27: John Nunley, Professor, University of Wisconsin- La Crosse, Alan Seals, Professor, Auburn University, and Christopher Cruz, Professor, Grand Valley State University, present The Effects of Automation Technologies on SSDI Applications and Awards March 9: Samara Scheckler, Research Associate, Harvard University, presents Pathways Into and Out of Homelessness: The Role of Frontline Workers to Promote Social Security Benefits Uptake and Housing Security for Adults 50 and Older Living in the Boston Area March 2: Molly Costanzo and Lisa Klein Vogel, Researchers at IRP, University of Wisconsin-Madison, present Parents of Children with Disabilities in Retirement: Economic Well-Being and Benefit Adequacy January 26: Cayte Anderson, Director of Research, UW-Stout, presents The Utilization of ABLE Accounts and Other Tax-advantaged Savings Accounts: A Scoping Reviewįebruary 2: Brielle Bryan, Assistant Professor, Rice University, presents Implications of Child Incarceration for Women’s Wealth and Labor Market Attachmentįebruary 9: Kate Pennington, Research Economist, US Census Bureau in the Center for Economic Studies, presents The Impacts of Racial Differences in Economic Challenges on Housing, Wealth, and Economic Security Among OASI Beneficiariesįebruary 16: Harold Pollack, Michael Levere, Guglielmo Briscese, University of Chicago, present Improving financial security for people with disabilities through ABLE accountsįebruary 23: Motohiro Yogo and Natalie Cox, Princeton University, present Financial Inclusion Across the United States Moulton’s research project titled “The COVID-19 Pandemic and Older Adults’Įmployment and Economic Security: Insights from Earnings and Credit Panel Data.” MacArthur Foundation, the Russell Sageįoundation, and the National Foundation for Credit Counseling. She has servedĪs principal investigator for numerous studies related to consumer finance, with funding fromĮntities including the U.S. Wall Street Journal, Consumer Reports, Bloomberg, and The Washington Post. She has published more than 40 journal articles, a book, and several bookĬhapters, with her research being featured in news outlets such as The New York Times, The Housing and consumer finance policies and programs, with an emphasis on vulnerable Moulton specializes in the design, implementation, and evaluation of Moulton is a professor and the Associate Dean for Faculty and Research in the John GlennĬollege of Public Affairs at The Ohio State University, a faculty affiliate of the Center forįinancial Security at the University of Wisconsin, and a visiting scholar at the Philadelphiaįederal Reserve Bank. I’m still amazed at how much I developed in just one week!” Mila Turner, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Florida A&M University was part of this year’s JSIT cohort.ĭr. JSIT provided the opportunity to develop and get feedback through “hands on,” iterative activities. “I’ve participated in a lot of junior scholar workshops, but none were as beneficial as JSIT. Scholars are first-generation and/or are economically disadvantaged and/or are from historically underrepresented populations. This year’s JSIT workshop was virtual, allowing participation from Minnesota to Mississippi, and California to Cambridge (England!). JSTI is an intensive training program for emerging researchers, and made possible with funding from the Retirement and Disability Research Consortium of the Social Security Administration (SSA). For a week in June 2021, the Center for Financial Security (CFS)-in collaboration with Howard University’s Center on Race and Wealth-held the annual summer workshop of Junior Scholar Intensive Training (JSIT) program.
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