School of Planning, Public Policy and Management News

Racial profiling and aggressive policing can affect infant health, PPPM research finds

PPPM Faculty, Nicole Ngo, recently published research observing the negative outcomes related to aggressive policing and racial profiling. Aggressive policing tactics like stop-and-frisk are linked to worse newborn health outcomes in neighborhoods where such tactics are most pervasive. Babies of non-Hispanic Black mothers had lower birth weights in New York City neighborhoods where police made more on-the-street stops, even when controlling for variables like income and education, according to the research, which analyzed data from 2006 to 2013.

MCRP Graduate Ray McPadden Assumes Role as Superintendent of Yosemite National Park

The School of Planning, Public Policy and Management is celebrating the recent announcement by National Park Service officials about the formal welcome MCRP graduate Ray McPadden received after earning his designation as superintendent of Yosemite National Park.

‘Mistrust and anxiety’: UO study finds aggressive policing impacts infant health

The latest study from co-author and PPPM associate professor, Nicole Ngo, explores and offers important insights for public safety and efforts to reduce gaps for infant health disparities that correlate with race. Published in the journal Social Science & Medicine and reported on by KOIN, the study found aggressive policing tactics, such as stop-and-frisk, are connected to worse outcomes for newborn health in neighborhoods where these tactics are more pervasive.

County names task force to help launch program to boost affordable housing

IPRE Faculty and PPPM MCRP Alumna, Melissa Graciosa, joins MCRP Alumnus, Eric Mongan, and PPPM Alumnus, Fabian Gomez Hernandez, on a Housing Taskforce for Lane County. The group will work on a project to guide how Lane County acquires, prepares and resells parcels of land, with an eye toward spurring affordable housing development in communities across the county.

PPPM Professor Diana Mason Talks with KLCC about the Changing Relationship of Volunteers and Organizations

PPPM Professor, Diana Mason, talked alongside other volunteer experts to KLCC about the new trends in volunteering, where volunteers are engaging in shorter terms of engagement instead of long, multiyear engagements with hundreds of hours of service dedicated to a single organization in a year.

Students gain vital experience while helping cities across Oregon

The Sustainable City Year Program started with a simple question: How can students’ innovative work be put into practice for the benefit of Oregonians? In 2009, that question moved University of Oregon College of Design professors Nico Larco and Marc Schlossberg to launch a program that, over the past 16 years, has employed the ingenuity and hard work of thousands of students on hundreds of projects for communities across Oregon.

PPPM's Ben Clark, and other experts, Talk to "THE BALTIMORE SUN" about Maryland's 311 Services

Ben Clark joins experts in an article from "THE BALTIMORE SUN" about the pros and cons of creating/instituting a statewide 311 network. With the 911 calls being burdened by important issues (e.g. potholes and trees falling down) that don't rise to emergency status (e.g. fires or a medical emergency), the 311 network is seen as a way to help relieve some of that burden on 911 operators. The article explores the pros and cons of such a statewide network.

PPPM Associate Professor Dyana Mason Talks with "The Oregonian" about Data Center Scandal

Associate Professor and Director of the Master's in Nonprofit Management Program, Dyana Mason, talks with Mike Rogoway at "The Oregonian" about the circumstances surrounding Rep. Greg Smith, Inland Development Corp., Morrow Development Corp., and Windwave Communications.

Cuts Debilitate Rural Oregon’s AmeriCorps Program, RARE

RARE director, Titus Tomlinson, and others talk about the impact of Federal cuts to AmeriCorps funding, hurting young professionals and rural communities alike.