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Journalists can use these 10 tools to examine education data in areas such as student achievement, school segregation and ...
As public health data becomes harder to access, journalists and experts at AHCJ25 shared tips and tools for uncovering and ...
Here's what journalists need to know to bolster their reporting on potential cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance ...
Journalists, journalism faculty and others recently took our audience survey to give us valuable feedback on how we can help ...
To help journalists, we read through dozens of published research papers and unpacked several recent studies about fluoride ...
While online social contact can be traced back to the 1980s, online dating began to gain more prominence — and participants — around 1997, according to a 2011 study by the Oxford Internet Institute.
Each year, thousands of people die trying to cross roads in the U.S., making pedestrian safety a perpetual policy issue in cities and towns of all sizes. That’s why local news outlets pay close ...
Recent research in the Quarterly Journal of Economics offers previously unseen levels of detail unraveling the relationship between labor unions and income inequality in the U.S. The study, “Unions ...
Former Congressman Tip O’Neill famously said “all politics is local.” The same applies to election administration in the U.S., which is markedly decentralized. On Election Day, county- and city-level ...
Academic studies in recent decades have repeatedly shown that how the news media portray Latinos and other minority groups influences how the public feels about them and whether voters support ...
If you report on economic research and government reports, you’ve almost certainly encountered the statistical term “per capita,” a Latin phrase that means “by heads” or, essentially, “per person.” ...