Today, the majority of poor renting families in America spend over half of their income on housing costs, and eviction is transforming their lives. Yet little is known about the prevalence, causes, and consequences of housing insecurity.
The Eviction Lab is a team of researchers, students, and website architects who believe that a stable, affordable home is central to human flourishing and economic mobility. Accordingly, understanding the sudden, traumatic loss of home through eviction is foundational to understanding poverty in America.
Drawing on tens of millions of records, the Eviction Lab at Princeton University has published the first ever dataset of evictions in America, going back to 2000. We hope you’ll join us in using the tools of this website to discover new facts about how eviction is shaping your community, raising awareness and working toward new solutions.
Matthew Desmond started studying housing, poverty, and eviction in 2008, living and working alongside poor tenants and their landlords in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Combining ethnographic fieldwork with original statistical analyses, Desmond discovered that eviction was incredibly prevalent in low-income communities and functioned as a cause, not just a condition, of poverty. This work was summarized in his book, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City (2016).
When speaking to people and policymakers across the country about Evicted, Desmond realized the need to collect national data on eviction to address fundamental questions about residential instability, forced moves, and poverty in America. With the support of the Gates, JPB, and Ford Foundations, as well as the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Desmond founded the Eviction Lab in 2017 with the conviction that stable, affordable housing can be an effective platform to promote economic mobility, health, and community vitality.
Through this website, the Eviction Lab has made nationwide eviction data publicly available and accessible. We hope this data is used by policymakers, community organizers, journalists, educators, non-profit organizations, students, and citizens interested in understanding more about housing, eviction, and poverty in their own backyards. You can look at evictions over time, map evictions in the United States, compare the eviction rates of different neighborhoods, cities, or states, and generate custom reports about America’s eviction epidemic.
Researchers can use the data to help us document the prevalence, causes, and consequences of eviction and to evaluate laws and policies designed to promote residential security and reduce poverty. Together, we hope our findings will inform programs to prevent eviction and family homelessness, raise awareness of the centrality of housing insecurity in the lives of low-income families, and deepen our understanding of the fundamental drivers of poverty in America.
Principal Investigator
Matthew Desmond is the Maurice P. During Professor of Sociology at Princeton University. After receiving his Ph.D. in 2010 from the University of Wisconsin at Madison, he joined the Harvard Society of Fellows as a Junior Fellow. He is the author of five books, including Poverty, by America (2023) and Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City (2016), which won the Pulitzer Prize, National Book Critics Circle Award, and Carnegie Medal, and PEN / John Kenneth Galbraith Award for Nonfiction. The principal investigator of The Eviction Lab, Desmond’s research focuses on poverty in America, city life, housing insecurity, public policy, racial inequality, and ethnography. He is the recipient of a MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship, the American Bar Association’s Silver Gavel Award, and the William Julius Wilson Early Career Award. A Contributing Writer for the New York Times Magazine, Desmond was listed in 2016 among the Politico 50, as one of “fifty people across the country who are most influencing the national political debate.”
Visiting Research Collaborator
Emily A. Benfer is an associate professor of clinical law (tenured) at George Washington University Law School. She first collaborated with the Eviction Lab in March 2020 to create the COVID-19 Housing Policy Scorecard. As a research collaborator with the Lab, she conducts legal mapping and policy surveillance of U.S. eviction and housing policy, including eviction moratoria, rental assistance, and right to counsel. Her clinic practice and research focus on the intersection of social determinants of health, racial inequity, and poverty with an emphasis on housing and eviction policies. Emily has widely published, testified before Congress, and appeared in numerous media outlets on these topics. Her research has been cited by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and in multiple federal bills and court orders. Emily’s volunteer activities have included serving as the appointed Chair of the American Bar Association’s Task Force on Eviction, Housing Stability, and Equity, a member of the Legal Services Corporation U.S. Eviction Law Study Advisory Board, a policy advisor to the National Center for Medical-Legal Partnership, and a volunteer for the Homeless Children’s Playtime Project. Emily also served as an Equal Justice Works Fellow and a Peace Corps volunteer. She has received numerous commendations for her efforts to advance health equity and housing justice, including the American Public Health Association David P. Rall Award for Advocacy and an American Bar Association Presidential Commendation. She was named one of Chicago’s Top 40 Lawyers Under 40 by the National Law Journal and recognized with the National Center for Medical-Legal Partnership Outstanding MLP Award and the Clinical Legal Education Award for the best case or project in the United States.
Research Specialist
Ben Boehlert is a Research Specialist at the Eviction Lab. He studied economics at McGill University, where his interest in policy first took shape. Afterward, he worked as a Senior Research Support Associate at the MIT Department of Economics, assisting Professor Jon Gruber and others with research and administrative tasks. During this time, he deepened his passion for welfare policy, taxation, and housing issues. In his spare time, he enjoys reading, playing basketball and baseball, and listening to the Talking Heads.
Research Specialist
Adam has a BA from Vassar College where he majored in Quantitative Political Science and minored in Political Philosophy. As an undergraduate, he worked as a research assistant analyzing the social network dynamics of promotion among Chinese government officials and its relationship to economic growth. Through Bluebonnet Data, he led a team of data analysts examining the prevalence and causes of ticket-splitting in southern Minnesota. He has contributed to the Eviction Tracking System as well as to research on landlord behavior and how eviction impacts displacement and the loss of food benefits. He is interested in Bayesian statistical inference, social science methods, and uncovering hidden patterns in housing insecurity and inequality. From Massachusetts, Adam enjoys backpacking and canoeing, ceramics, and learning how to cook new foods.
Administrative Assistant
Bria Dixon is an Administrative Assistant at the Eviction Lab. She has a bachelor’s degree in Natural Resources with a concentration in Environmental Science. A Jersey native, her recent focus is climate change and natural disasters in relation to sustainable development and the right to affordable housing during the COVID-19 pandemic. In her spare time, Bria loves to indulge in yoga, blogging, and traveling.
Program Coordinator
Kathryn (Kate) earned her M.A. in Urban Studies from Fordham University in 2022. After having worked in the architecture and historic preservation fields, she pursued her degree to supplement her professional experiences with critical study of the structural forces impacting social and economic justice in cities. Her graduate research explored innovative approaches to affordable and supportive housing and sustainable development. A former language educator in Newark and San Francisco as well as Helsinki, Finland, Kate brings a deep appreciation for cultural heritage to her work at the lab.
Communication & Policy Engagement Manager
Juan Pablo Garnham is a Chilean journalist interested in cities, public policy, and immigrant communities. In his previous work as the Urban Affairs reporter for The Texas Tribune, Juan Pablo reported on the main challenges of Texas' largest metro areas — Houston, Austin, San Antonio, El Paso and Dallas-Fort Worth, where he is based. Juan Pablo has also worked as senior producer for the podcast In The Thick, editor of CityLab Latino, and City Hall reporter for El Diario in New York. In Chile, he wrote for some of the country’s most important magazines and newspapers. Juan Pablo brings his expertise as a bilingual and multimedia journalist to his position as the Communication & Policy Engagement Manager for the Eviction Lab.
Lab Director
Carl Gershenson is Lab Director at Eviction Lab. He has published on the causes and consequences of housing instability, with a special focus on how eviction leads to further economic and residential insecurity. He received his Ph.D. in Sociology from Harvard University, where his dissertation explored the political and cultural origins of the American business corporation. After graduation, Carl joined the Sociology Department at Washington University in St. Louis as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow.
At the Eviction Lab, Carl will continue to study how American political economy creates the conditions for the contemporary housing crisis. He is also deeply interested in issues around climate and energy, and he will work these interests into his research at Eviction Lab. When life gives him the chance, Carl likes to read history and fiction and explore Philadelphia.
For more on Carl’s research, go to https://gershenson.scholar.princeton.edu/
Visiting Research Collaborator
Nick Graetz is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Minnesota. Previously, he was a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Eviction Lab from 2020-2024. Nick holds a BA from the University of Wisconsin, MPH from the University of Washington, and a PhD in Demography from the University of Pennsylvania. He is interested in sociological methods, including Bayesian hierarchal modeling and data viz, racial segregation and urban life, education, and health policy. His work has appeared in Nature, the New England Journal of Medicine, and The Lancet, among others.
Research Specialist
Jacob is a Research Specialist at the Eviction Lab, where he contributes to research on eviction filing patterns during the COVID-19 pandemic. He previously worked as a Research Associate with the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. While there, he contributed to research on a range of topics related to regional economics and monetary policy. Jacob earned his B.A. in Economics and Mathematics from Washington University in St. Louis.
Research Specialist
Grace Hartley is a Research Specialist at the Eviction Lab. Grace earned her B.A. from Smith College with a double-major in Statistical & Data Sciences and American Studies. She focused on studying mechanisms within the production of knowledge that drive inequality and oppression in America. As an undergraduate, Grace co-authored an R package that facilitates Partial Least Squares Regression on lake sediment core spectroscopy data. Through a partnership with a local public health non-profit, she worked on a team of students to create an interactive data atlas of public health indicator data in Springfield, Massachusetts. Prior to joining the lab, Grace worked on a small organic farm in Maine. She enjoys hiking, amateur film photography, and sailing.
Associate Director
Peter is an assistant professor of Sociology at Rutgers University-Newark. Peter first joined the Eviction Lab in 2018 as a postdoc after completing his PhD in Sociology and Demography at the University of California, Berkeley. At the Lab, he has done work on serial eviction filings, racial and gender disparities in eviction rates, eviction in suburban spaces, gentrification and eviction, and money judgments in eviction cases. He also developed and leads the Eviction Tracking System. Outside of the Lab, Peter’s research examines the ways that employment practices and public policies affect children and low-income families. He has also studied the effects of mass imprisonment on kin networks, exposure to subfelony criminal justice in New York City, and trajectories of employment and disability among American workers. Peter runs one marathon a year and no, he has not qualified for Boston (thank you for asking). You can read more about him at pshepburn.github.io.
Research Specialist
Sarah attended the University of Memphis where she received a BBA in Business Economics in 2015 and a Master’s in City and Regional Planning in 2022. Sarah primarily focuses on housing quality, and wrote her master’s capstone on landlord neglect in private rental markets. Sarah previously worked at the Shelby County Department of Housing in Memphis where she primarily assisted with the homeowner rehabilitation program. Sarah specializes in using R for data retrieval, cleaning, analysis, and visualization. In her spare time, Sarah enjoys playing Mario Kart, crochet, and walking with her dog. You can read more about her at sarahjohnson.io.
Data Engineer
Salar is a data engineer at the Eviction Lab. He holds a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering and Computational Science from Purdue University. Specializing in crafting sophisticated data pipelines and robust databases and warehouses, his role is to streamline data collection and storage for research initiatives. Salar has contributed his expertise as an AI engineer in corporate sector. His passion lies in the conceptualization and development of data intensive products and applications, with a focus on harnessing the power of artificial intelligence to extract valuable insights and address complex challenges.
Research Specialist
Lorae Stojanovic is a Research Specialist at the Eviction Lab. She earned her A.B. in Economics from Harvard University, where she wrote her honors senior thesis on how the availability of remote work predicted home price growth in American cities during the pandemic. Prior to joining the Eviction Lab, Lorae worked at the Brookings Institution, where she played a key role in developing a model that measures the impact of fiscal policy on American GDP growth. At Harvard, Lorae worked on public policy and political economic research at both the Kennedy School and Department of Government. Lorae is interested in understanding determinants of home values, prices, and rents. Outside of her work at the Eviction Lab, Lorae is an IRS certified Volunteer Income Tax Assistance preparer and enjoys running, skiing, and rollerblading.
Communications Specialist
Camila is a bilingual communications specialist for the Eviction Lab. She’s interested in eviction diversion measures, who gets harmed by evictions, and tenant organizing. Prior to joining the lab, Camila was the housing reporter for Connecticut Public through Report for America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to dive into undercovered issues. Her work has been featured on NPR’s Morning Edition, PRX’s The World, NPR’s Here and Now and more. She graduated from the University of Connecticut with a B.A. in journalism and communications.
Postdoctoral Research Associate
Eunsung Yoon received her PhD in Sociology with a Minor in Information Science, as well as a Certificate in Computational Social Science from the University of Arizona. She earned her MA and BA from Korea University. Her research interests lie in understanding how specific strategies diffuse among market competitors, and how market actors make decisions about whom to monitor in situations of uncertainty. She employs an inductive approach to build sociological models, utilizing a diverse range of machine learning techniques such as geographically weighted neural networks and satellite-based mapping. At the Eviction Lab, she delves into examining how the structure of the rental market and the pricing strategies of individual landlords have changed over time, focusing on the increasing influence of investor landlords, online real estate platforms, and pricing recommendation algorithms.
Program Coordinator
Since joining the Eviction Lab in 2022, Tasneem has managed day-to-day operations while taking on a wide range of design projects. She created educational materials for Poverty, by America, led the creation of an antipoverty resource database, and regularly produces event photography and promotional materials for both lab and university events, including the wide-reaching Princeton Public Lectures series. Before joining the Eviction Lab, Tasneem worked at UCSF’s Hollenbach Lab, researching immune system links to health outcomes like COVID-19 severity. She holds degrees in Bioinformatics from The University of Chicago and Molecular and Cell Biology from UC Berkeley.
Tasneem is from Nairobi, Kenya and speaks five languages, currently working hard to level up her Spanish. When not working, she is consumed by her ever-growing repertoire of hobbies—sewing, crochet, origami, embroidery, painting, photography, resin art, singing and guitar.
You can view Tasneem’s portfolio here.
Graduate Research Assistant
Sophie is a Masters of Public Affairs candidate at the School of Public & International Affairs. She holds a B.A in Political Economy from UC Berkeley. Before her studies at Princeton, she worked in public sector strategy consulting and transportation planning. She has also been a tenant organizer for the past 8 years, working with students, tenants, and migrants to secure rapid rehousing and social housing placements, form tenant associations, conduct rent strikes, and hold eviction defenses. She is currently researching the impacts of landlord ownership structure on rural evictions.
Graduate Research Assistant
Asha Banerjee is a doctoral student in the Population Studies and Social Policy program at Princeton University. She graduated with a B.A. in Economics and History from Columbia University and a Master of Philosophy in Economic and Social History from the University of Oxford. Prior to Princeton, Asha worked as an economic analyst in the Chief Economist’s Office at the U.S. Department of Labor and the Economic Policy Institute. Asha’s research interests focus on labor, unions, and the historical development and persistence of racial disparities and structural inequality in the economy. She hopes to analyze the roles migration and demographic change play, as well as the power and limitations of government and other institutional interventions. In her free time, you can find her at the Princeton Garden Theater or Labyrinth Books.
Graduate Research Assistant
Ronnie Clevenstine is a doctoral student in Sociology and Social Policy at Princeton University, affiliated with the Princeton Office of Population Research. Her research primarily focuses on poverty, rural populations, property insurance, and the social safety net. She is particularly interested how climate risk and state policy environments shape community well-being and exploitation in rural areas and the American South.
Prior to starting at Princeton, she received her BS in Economics from Clemson University and worked as a mixed-methods research assistant at a social policy research firm, where she conducted research on social insurance and safety net restriction at the federal and state level.
Graduate Research Assistant
Jabari Cook (he/they) is a doctoral student in Sociology and Social Policy. His research interests include poverty, social safety net programs, and the causes of economic insecurity among marginalized populations. Before beginning their Ph.D., Jabari worked as a Research Assistant at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, where they researched how federal social and fiscal policies can be used to better support people with low incomes. He also previously examined employment and income trajectories among disadvantaged youth while interning at The Brookings Institution. Jabari earned their B.A. in Political Science from the University of Pittsburgh.
Graduate Research Assistant
Rita is currently a Master in Public Policy candidate at the School of Public and International Affairs. She previously served as Executive Director of the City of San Diego’s Office of Immigrant Affairs where she managed the city’s Welcoming San Diego initiative and inclusive programs to help immigrants in the city establish new lives in San Diego. Prior to that, she was Associate Director for Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti’s Office of Immigrant Affairs. Rita got her start working on immigration and border issues in the office of Rep. Juan Vargas of California where she worked as a Press Aide. Rita was born and raised in the city of Chula Vista in San Diego County and is the daughter of Mexican immigrants. In 2010, she received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from the University of San Diego. She is currently researching the impact of evictions on undocumented immigrant communities.
Graduate Research Assistant
Max is a doctoral student in Sociology and Social Policy at Princeton. Their current research projects examine the causes of rising corporate ownership of residential property, the racial structure of financial bubbles, and exploitation in housing markets.
They are interested more broadly in property ownership, wealth inequality, and economic sociology, as well as causal inference and machine learning.
Prior to Princeton, Max graduated from Columbia University in 2018 with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, focusing on 20th-century German and French social thought. After graduating, they worked for two years as a legal advocate for low-income New Yorkers with severe illnesses and disabilities, helping clients restore their housing stability, access food and healthcare, and keep their families together through administrative litigation against government agencies.
Graduate Research Assistant
Solome Haile (she/her) is a Sociology doctoral student at Princeton University. Prior to starting her graduate studies, Solome served as a minister to Black students, a research associate in the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research’s Landscapes of Structural Racism and Health Lab, and a research assistant in Washington University in St. Louis’s Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity and Equity. She completed her BA in Biology from Washington University in St. Louis. Her research interests include gender, critical race theory, critical carceral studies, Black feminisms, intersectionality, and qualitative methodologies.
Graduate Research Assistant
Raheem Hanifa is a doctoral student in the Sociology department at Princeton. His research interests are in urban sociology, neighborhood change, and race. He is particularly interested in understanding the historical impacts of Black homeownership exclusion from US housing markets on the socio-economic trajectories of Black households and neighborhoods. Raheem is also interested in perceptions of reparations and the role of reparations in mitigating White-Black racial wealth gaps.
Prior to joining the graduate program at Princeton Raheem worked at Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies conducting research on homeownership trends and housing affordability. He also worked at the US Government Accountability Office conducting research on topics related to federal homeownership programs and the housing finance system. Raheem received an MPP from the University of California-Berkeley, and a B.A. in Political Science and Sociology from Michigan State University.
Research Assistant
Sarah is a third-year undergraduate in the Sociology department pursuing a certificate in Asian American Studies. Her prior internship experiences involve teaching English in Kenya, mobilizing pretrial defendants to vote in Texas, and working as a housing policy intern at the Bipartisan Policy Center. Outside of the Lab, Sarah is a U-Councilor on USG, Chair of Law and Public Affairs, and a Petey Greene volunteer.
Graduate Research Assistant
Tina Lee is a first year Master in Public Affairs student at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. She holds a B.A. in Economics and Environmental Studies from the University of Toronto. Prior to Princeton, Tina worked at the National League of Cities where she managed eviction prevention technical assistance programs and research projects on topics like the impacts of institutional investors in local housing markets. Tina also works part time as the Director of Content for a California-based housing and urban development consultancy that develops strategic plans, research, and grant applications for nonprofits, housing coalitions, state working groups, civil rights law firms and more.
Graduate Research Assistant
Lillian is a first-year doctoral student in Sociology and Social Policy at Princeton University. She graduated in 2017 from New York University’s Stern School of Business, where she studied Economics and Global Business. Prior to her graduate studies, Lillian was a research specialist at the Eviction Lab, where she helped collect, clean, and analyze eviction records. She has also conducted interviews with landlords and tenants from South Carolina, Alabama, and Ohio to study the phenomenon of serial eviction filings. Broadly, she is interested in understanding the drivers of neighborhood change, economic inequality, and residential segregation. In her free time, she enjoys painting and reading, as well as learning to skateboard.
Graduate Research Assistant
Devin Q. Rutan is a first-year Ph.D. student in Princeton’s Sociology Department and is affiliated with the Office of Population Research. He is interested in the re-production of spatial inequality and the persistence of residential segregation. In 2016, he received a Bachelor of Philosophy in Urban Studies from the University of Pittsburgh. He is currently exploring the relationships between rising rents and evictions.
Graduate Research Assistant
Gillian Slee is a Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology and Social Policy at Princeton University. She graduated from Harvard College in 2016 with a degree in Social Studies and a minor in Psychology. In 2017, Gillian earned her M.Phil. degree in Criminology at the University of Cambridge where she was a Herchel Smith Harvard Scholar. Her research focuses on urban poverty, criminal justice, housing, policy, and ethnography. Gillian is a recipient of Princeton’s Centennial and Marion J. Levy fellowships. At the Eviction Lab, she is currently exploring the neighborhood-level consequences of eviction on voting.
Intern, Rutgers University
Duane Horne is a Rutgers University student pursuing a bachelor’s degree in Health Science with a focus on Public Policy and Health. He joins the Eviction Lab through the Aspiring Scholars and Professionals (ASAP) internship program at Princeton University. A proud Marine Corps veteran, Duane is passionate about fostering a stronger presence in his community and discovering effective methods to teach and educate others. His goals include advancing his skills in community outreach, data gathering and analysis, and research methods to address socio-economic disparities in health and fitness. Duane is dedicated to improving public health through education and advocacy.
Research Assistant
Jade Jang, a member of Princeton University’s Class of 2025, is pursuing a bachelor’s degree in Sociology, with minors in Religion and Values and Public Life. During her time at Princeton, she has interned at the United States Department of Justice and the Fair Share Housing Center in Mount Laurel, NJ, exploring how physical space facilitates or hinders access to opportunities. Her research interests include residential segregation and neighborhood change. For her undergraduate thesis, Jade is focused on the question of how institutional investors and shifting college enrollment trends affect off-college-campus rental markets. In her free time, she likes to knit and go on runs.
Research Assistant
Katherine is a first-year student in the School of Public and International Affairs. She hopes to pursue a minor in Korean Language and a certificate in Entrepreneurship. Her prior internship experiences involve an investigation on the district-level impact of key issues in the 2022 NJ-08 Democratic primary race, such as Medicare for All, housing insecurity, and the abolishment of qualified immunity. She has also previously worked as a legal intern.
At the lab, Katherine plans to assist in conducting research on the complex cause-and-effect relationship underlying the response of housing costs and eviction rates to recent macroeconomic trends. She hopes to generate insightful and accessible findings that will serve to elevate the issue of housing insecurity to the forefront of policy discussions aimed at remediating residential security.
Outside of the lab, Katherine currently serves as a member of both the Output subteam for Princeton’s Entrepreneurship Club and Princeton’s Women in Entrepreneurship. She is also an Opinion writer for The Daily Princetonian and is involved in the Princeton Pre-Law Society, Asian-American Students Association, and Korean-American Students Association.
Program Coordinator/Research Staff
Department of Housing and Urban Development, Program Specialist
Program Coordinator/Research Staff
Narrative Change Liaison, 2020-21
Writer, NerdWallet
Narrative Change Liaison, 2020-21
Research Specialist, 2017-2020
Stanford University, PhD Student (Economics of Education)
Research Specialist, 2017-2020
Lavar Edmonds is a research specialist with the Eviction Lab. Guided by experiences as a high school math teacher, his research broadly centers around inequality, particularly in education. In college, he worked as the data analyst for the school’s Student Transition Program, studying academic outcomes for first-generation and traditionally underrepresented minority students at the university. While at Penn, Lavar worked as a research assistant at the School District of Philadelphia and conducted a semester-long research project examining the causes of teacher exit in Tulsa Public Schools. His current research explores the impact of teachers from Historically Black College and Universities (HBCUs) on student achievement. As part of the Eviction Lab team, he is especially interested in studying the intersection of housing policy – namely, causes and consequences of housing instability – with education policy. Beyond policy research, Lavar is a classically-trained violinist, and enjoys music performance and rousing, relatively slow-paced games of tennis. Originally from Norfolk, Virginia, Lavar studied economics and mathematics at the University of Mary Washington and education policy at the University of Pennsylvania.
Research Specialist
Duke University, PhD Student (Economics)
Research Specialist
Postdoctoral Research Associate, 2017-2019
Postdoctoral Fellow at University of California, Los Angeles
Postdoctoral Research Associate, 2017-2019
Ashley joined the Eviction Lab as a postdoctoral research associate after completing her Ph.D. in Sociology at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her dissertation research examined the formation and consequences of spatial clustering of children with non-medical exemptions to school vaccine requirements in California. More broadly, her research interests focus on how social networks and local communities provide the social context for individual decisions and events that aggregate to form macro-level patterns across space and time. She is particularly interested in how quantitative and computational methodology can be used with administrative and online data to gain new insights into social behavior and community-level outcomes. When not cleaning data (which she rather enjoys), she goes hiking, puts together puzzles, and has been working her way through Amazon’s list of 100 books to read in a lifetime.
Research Specialist
Stanford University, PhD Student (Sociology)
Research Specialist
Senior Research Specialist, 2017-2019
University of Southern California, PhD Student (Public Policy and Management)
Senior Research Specialist, 2017-2019
James is a graduate of the University of Michigan, where he obtained a B.A. in Public Policy with a focus on Applied Statistics and Labor Policy. He has worked for several public interest research and advocacy groups, such as the ACLU and the Economic Growth Institute, where he developed a deep interest in the intersection of statistical analysis and policy. Currently serving as a Research Affiliate with the Eviction Lab, James seeks to better understand the impact of eviction on residents of public housing, as well as how local policymakers can best craft housing assistance solutions that will benefit their communities. In his free time, he is an avid dancer and enjoys volunteering in the local arts community.
Postdoctoral Research Associate, 2019-2021
Assistant Professor of Economics, Chatham University
Postdoctoral Research Associate, 2019-2021
Aparna completed her Ph.D. at the Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her dissertation research studies the relationship between land conservation policies and economic development. A large part of her current research is devoted to studying the extent to which early land conservation policies in the USA affect later economic and environmental conditions in the Great Plains. More broadly, her research interests include how urban and rural land policies affect inequality. Her research combines methods and theories from environmental economics, economic history, and development economics with modern empirical strategies.
You can read more about her at aparnahowlader.com.
Research Specialist
Research Specialist
Amber Jackson is a Research Specialist at Eviction Lab. Amber earned her B.A. in Sociology with a minor in Politics, Law, and Social Thought at Rice University. At Rice, Amber was also involved in numerous programs with the Center for Civic Leadership such as the Houston Policy Challenge, Alternative Spring Break, etc. During her undergraduate studies, she was able to do research projects on reproductive justice and housing policy issues focusing on their intersections with education, income, and race. At the Eviction Lab, Amber’s research interests involve studying racial residential segregation, Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) and the effects of neighborhoods on quality of life and socioeconomic mobility.
Research Specialist
Stanford University, PhD Student (Sociology)
Research Specialist
Administrative Assistant
New York University, PhD Student (English)
Administrative Assistant
Administrative Assistant
Bruce Springsteen Archives at Monmouth University
Administrative Assistant
Annalaan joined the Eviction Lab as an administrative assistant in 2023. She received her master’s degree in Business Administration with a concentration in Marketing and her bachelor’s degree in Business Administration with a concentration in Real Estate from Monmouth University. Beginning as a program assistant at the lab, she curated and conducted outreach to anti-poverty organizations for the website End Poverty USA, which launched alongside Poverty, By America. She previously worked at the Bruce Springsteen Archives and Center for American Music as an archival assistant in West Long Branch, NJ. During her work at the archives, she contributed to exhibits such as “Bruce Springsteen: Live!” which traveled across the various Grammy Museums nationwide. Annalaan loves to read, swim and play hyper-competitive card games with her friends and their parents on the weekends.
Research Specialist
Communications and Outreach for NY Assm. Zohran Mamdani
Research Specialist
Research Specialist, 2019-2021
PhD student at Stanford University, Dept. of Sociology
Research Specialist, 2019-2021
Renee received her B.A. from Princeton University where she concentrated in Sociology and received a certificate in Statistics and Machine Learning. Her undergraduate research endeavors ranged from examining nonprofit Twitter behavior, analyzing attitudes towards inequality across forty years of survey data, as well as studying the experiences of student dining hall workers on campus. Her broader intellectual interests include the intersection of qualitative and quantitative methods in the social sciences. Originally from Singapore, Renee loves film, travel, stand-up comedy and R programming.
Research Lab Coordinator, 2019-2021
CUNY Graduate Center, PhD Student (Political Science)
Research Lab Coordinator, 2019-2021
Helena received her HBSc from the University of Toronto in 2017, and graduated from Columbia University’s MA in Global Thought program in 2019. She has worked at the nexus of health, politics and social inequality in academic and public service capacities, and is broadly interested in researching social welfare policy, urban inequality, citizenship and social stratification. Her extra-academic life consists of roaming around New York, drinking bodega iced coffee and sketching.
Research Specialist, 2017-2019
University of Washington, MPA ‘21
Research Specialist, 2017-2019
Adam is a research specialist with the Eviction Lab. He received his bachelor’s degree in Sociology with a concentration in analysis and research from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Prior to working at Princeton, he supported social science research projects at the Center for Financial Security and the Environmental Resources Center. He also has a background in political organizing and community non-profits. At the eviction lab, Adam’s research interests include exploring the intersection between affordable housing policy, community health, and cooperative economic institutions.
Research Specialist
Jasmine Rangel – Senior Housing Associate, PolicyLink
Research Specialist
Research Assistant
Research Assistant
Ndidi is a junior at Princeton University concentrating in the Woodrow Wilson School and pursuing certificates in the Global Health Program and African American Studies. On campus, she serves as Co-Vice President of Insure Jersey, and volunteers with the HomeFront Health Initiative and Students for Prison Education and Reform (SPEAR). In her free time, she enjoys singing with the Trego ensemble. As someone who is interested in the social determinants of health, she looks forward to potentially investigating the relationship between housing and health outcomes.
Graduate Research Assistant
Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Southern California
Graduate Research Assistant
Henry is a first-year doctoral student in Sociology and Social Policy at Princeton University. He graduated from Harvard College in 2017 with a degree in Sociology and a minor in Statistics. For his undergraduate thesis, he studied how American cities have become unaffordable for many renters and the consequences that has had for social life in rent-burdened communities. Henry currently studies the causes of rising rent prices, the relationships between landlords and tenants, and how evictions affect community life. In his free time, Henry likes to cook, listen to podcasts, and recite scenes from sitcoms to patient friends.
Graduate Research Assistant
Resident in Internal Medicine, UCLA
Graduate Research Assistant
Gracie is a doctoral candidate in Demography and Social Policy at Princeton University, and a medical student at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. She graduated with an AB from Princeton in 2012 in Public Policy and International Affairs. Gracie studies health disparities, and how social inequality is reflected in, and perpetuated by, the health care system. Her recent work has looked at how the effects of abstinence-only education funding on teen reproductive health outcomes varies by state political ideology, and how ACA-facilitated Medicaid expansion altered social determinants of health such as food insecurity. In her free time Gracie likes to ski, take pictures of everything she cooks, and ask strangers if she can pet their dogs.
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Graduate Research Assistant
Post-Doctoral Associate at Rutgers
Graduate Research Assistant
Matt is a doctoral student in Population Studies and Social Policy at Princeton University. He graduated with his B.A. in Economics and Political Science from the University of Notre Dame in 2015. Before beginning his studies at Princeton, Matt worked as a research assistant and programmer at Mathematica Policy Research, where he developed an interest in housing policy and segregation. Matt currently studies how racial, ethnic, and economic integration can reduce prejudice and improve social trust within communities. At the Eviction Lab, he hopes to study how integration and fair housing policies affect residential displacement patterns. Matt plays guitar, drums, and a bit of piano and in a past life, was a drummer in an alternative rock band.
Research Assistant
Research Assistant
Scott Overbey is a junior in the Economics Department at Princeton University pursuing certificates in Statistics/Machine Learning, Political Economy, and Urban Studies. His research interests generally cover poverty, housing, and public finance in the United States and what government, specifically at a local level, can do to address social ills. As a proud Cincinnati native, he hopes to use this research to impact local policy making in his hometown. Outside of the Lab, Scott is an Assistant Residential College Advisor in Butler College, Captain of the Model United Nations Team, and a Junior Fellow for the Pace Center’s Service Focus Program.
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Martin is a rising senior and student at Rutgers University where he is majoring in Criminal Justice and minoring in Legal Studies. Prior to interning at the Eviction Lab, Martin interned at the New Jersey Institute for Social Justice where he focused on social issues, such as racial wealth disparities and inequality, among other things. He has also worked as a paralegal in the State Department of Corrections where he provided legal assistance to system-impacted people. He is interested in research in housing insecurity and racial inequality. In his spare time, he enjoys listening to music, exercising, writing, and reading short articles.
Research Assistant
Research Assistant
Naomi is a third-year undergraduate in the Sociology department, pursuing a certificate in the Center for Human Values. Prior to beginning at Princeton, she lived in Dakar, Senegal in a year of cultural immersion, fostering an interest in the relationship between development interventions and how they interact with the complexities of people’s lived experiences. Her current research interests include international development, poverty interventions, and mental health disparities, global and domestic. In the lab, she is thrilled to explore the relationship between eviction and educational outcomes. Outside of research, Naomi spends time singing ‘60s and ‘70s folk music and running through the woods of Princeton.
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Sharvari is a rising junior at Swarthmore College pursuing a double major in computer science and English literature. She previously interned at the Pennsylvania Prison Society, where she helped provide resources to incarcerated people across the country. At Swarthmore, Sharvari is a news editor for her campus publication and a computer science mentor. (edited)
Summer Intern
Summer Intern
Research Assistant
Research Assistant
Larry is a second-year undergraduate at Princeton University majoring in Operations Research and Financial Engineering, and pursuing certificates in Computer Science and Statistics and Machine Learning. He is a member of the National Society of Black Engineers and Princeton’s Black Men’s Association. In his free time, he enjoys listening to music and chilling with friends. He is interested in learning how statistics and machine learning can help affect impact real-life situations such as housing.
We thank the following Citizen Researchers for helping us build America’s first national database of evictions by providing original data to the Eviction Lab. If you would like to share eviction data with us, please email research@evictionlab.org.
Associate Director, Data Science & Technology
Urban Institute
Assisted with: Washington, DC
Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Sociology
University of California, Los Angeles
Assisted with: Los Angeles and California
Staff Attorney, Housing Unit
Community Legal Aid
Assisted with: Massachusetts
Moore/Sloan Data Science Postdoc, Department of Sociology
University of Washington
Assisted with: Washington State
Assisted with: Kansas and Missouri
Housing Policy Analysts
Community Service Society
Assisted with: New York City
Contract Performance Officer
Philadelphia Legal Assistance
Assisted with: Pennsylvania
Attorney at Law
Legal Aid of the Bluegrass
Assisted With: Kentucky
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