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    Dan Zuberi

    Daniyal Zuberi

    PhD in Sociology and Social Policy, 2004.
    Royal Bank Chair and Professor of Social Policy, University of Toronto.


    Daniyal Zuberi is currently a PI on a SSHRC Insight Grant: “Social Policy and Urban Poverty in Canada” (2017-2021).

    D(Re)Generating Inclusive Cities, by Dan Zuberian Zuberi's fourth book, co-authored with Ariel Judith Taylor, (Re) Generating Inclusive Cities: Poverty and Planning in Urban North America, has been published by Routledge (2018).

    Dan Zuberi's third book, Schooling the Next Generation: Creating Success in Urban Elementary Schools, has been published by University of Toronto Press (2015).Schooling the Next Generation

    Dan Zuberi has been elected a member of the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists, 2015.

    Dan Zuberi's second book, Cleaning Up: How Hospital Outsourcing is Hurting Workers and Endangering Patients, has Cleaning Upbeen published by Cornell University Press (2013).

    William Lyon Mackenzie King Research Fellow, Harvard University, 2011-2012.

    Dan Zuberi's first book, Differences That Matter: Social Policy and the Working Poor in the United States and Canada, has been published by Cornell University Press (2006). 

    Winner of the Michael Harrington Book Award given by the New Political Science Section of the American Political Science Association, 2007.

    Differences that MatterFinalist for the Hubert Evans Non-fiction Prize, awarded annually for the best non-fiction book by a resident of British Columbia. 

    Honorable Mention, Gustavus Myers Award.

    Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Title.

    Crystal S. Yang

    Crystal S. Yang

    PhD in Economics and JD, Harvard Law School, 2013.
    Professor of Law, Harvard Law School.


    Olin Fellow and Instructor of Law, University of Chicago Law School, 2013-2014.

    Crystal Yang’s teaching and research interests center around empirical law and economics, particularly in the areas of criminal justice and consumer bankruptcy.

    Winner John M. Olin Prize for best paper in law and economics for “Free At Last? Judicial Discretion and Racial Disparities in Federal Sentencing,” 2013.

    Miya Woolfalk

    Miya Woolfalk

    PhD in Government and Social Policy, 2013.
    Director of Research, Analyst Institute.


    Assistant Professor of Political Science, Wellesley College, 2013-2016.

    Miya Woolfalk leads a team of research managers and analysts who design, implement and analyze research projects on a wide range of topics. Her substantive expertise and primary interests are in civic engagement and voter mobilization, with a focus on the political behavior of racial and ethnic groups. 

    Justin Wolfers

    Justin Wolfers is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and professor of economics and public policy at the University of Michigan.

    Justin Wolfers

    PhD in Economics, 2001.
    Professor of Economics and Professor of Public Policy in the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan.
    Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics.


    Visting Professor of Economics, The University of Sydney, 2014-present.
    Senior Scientist, Gallup, 2011-present.

    Non-Resident Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution, 2009-present.
    Research Associate, NBER, 2009-present.

    Named one of the  top 25 economists under the age of 45 by the IMF, 2014.

    Recipient of the Excellence Award in Global Economic Affairs, Kiel Institute (Germany), 2007.

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