As social justice issues rose to the forefront in the past year, Ā鶹“«Ć½ professors Heidi Nichols Haddad and Stephen Marks have earned prestigious 2021 Faculty Fellowship Awards from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation.
The supports social science research that can break new ground on economic, social and political problems, particularly projects with the potential to influence policy and action in the Los Angeles region. Faculty from throughout Southern California, home to a number of major research universities, are eligible for the $12,000 grants, with six projects chosen this year. The selection of Haddad, a politics professor, and Marks, an economics professor, marks the first time two Pomona faculty members have earned the awards in the same year. Their projects each align with courses they teach and create potential for impactful student research on current issues.
Making U.N. Sustainability Goals Local
Haddadās project, āGlobal Sustainability to Local Equality,ā connects with Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcettiās efforts to localize the United Nationsā . Known as SDGs, the goals address 17 wide-ranging areas including poverty, education, clean water and energy, work and climate change. Though the SDGs were designed for countries, a small but growing number of cities around the globe are voluntarily adopting them.
Haddad, an expert in international relations, is pivoting to study local implementation. Her politics class on Cities, Rights, and Sustainable Development is an experiential learning course focused on L.A.ās efforts on SDG 5, gender equality. The challenge is to translate ways of measuring progress on gender equality goalsācovering such issues as violence against women, health and economic opportunityāthat were originally intended for countries to a city level.
āThe Sustainable Development Goals gave no blueprint for cities, and cities were in this new place, thinking āWhat does localization actually look like?āā Haddad says. āSo that's what our class is doing. We're developing somewhere between 20 and 30 metrics for cities on gender equity.ā Her Pomona students recently presented their work in progress to city officials as they refine the metrics. āThese will be used for city reporting as well as admission criteria for new cities to join the global ,ā Haddad says.
As part of Pomonaās partnership with the City of Los Angeles on the issue, two students last summer: Janie Marcus ā23 worked on homelessness issues, and Virginia Paschal ā21, whose career interests include environmental policy, researched indoor air quality and decarbonization initiatives within the city.
This summer, Haddad plans to combine research, analysis and interviews to produce a report for the city as well as a public opinion piece for a news outlet.
Studying the Impact of a State Law on Crime
Marksā project, āCalifornia Public Safety Realignment and Crime Rates: An Empirical Analysis of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area,ā will analyze the impacts of a 2011 California law, Assembly Bill (AB) 109, on crime rates in Los Angeles using what is called a difference-in-differences approach.
AB 109, a response to a U.S. Supreme Court mandate to reduce state prison overcrowding, shifted responsibility for monitoring and incarcerating those convicted of ānon-serious, non-violent, non-sexā offenses from the state to county governments. Marksā study will examine the impact of the policy change by evaluating changes in crime rates in California cities before and after the law compared with changes in cities around the country, and will focus on Los Angeles County as a case study of how the policy has influenced criminal justice procedures in practice.
Marksā expertise is in international economics, but his study of criminal justice reform grew out of a course he taught, Economics of Crime. A student in the class, Seth Pope ā23, was interested in the issue of private prisons, leading to work with Marks on econometric analysis of the fluctuations in the stock values of two private prison companies, CoreCivic and the GEO Group, particularly in relation to such events as the police killing of George Floyd and the 2020 presidential election.
āIt was really an incredible exercise in econometrics,ā Marks says. āThe complexities of the statistical studies are quite something.ā
The number of other factors in studying the effects of AB 109 adds challenges to the research, Marks says, noting it will be necessary to control for such things as unemployment rates, the size of police forces and even necessary to find a way to set aside the influence of other criminal justice reform measures.
Yet another factor is the pandemic, which has seen an uptick in murder rates while other types of crimes fell during a period so unprecedented Marks says he is likely to not include it in the study. The sands never stop shifting, he notes, including Los Angeles County votersā approval of Measure J in November, which redirects more funding to social services and jail diversion programs.
āI think that there could be many opportunities to keep this research on criminal justice going,ā he says. āOne of the beauties of it is that there are frequent policy experiments.ā