Northwestern study yields insights for improving outcomes for justice-involved youth
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Incarceration has lasting consequences. Many young people who have been incarcerated later struggle to achieve the basic milestones in adulthood, such as living on their own or maintaining a long-term job. Black and Hispanic males are more likely to be affected because they are disproportionately incarcerated and receive longer sentences than non-Hispanic white males.
In a groundbreaking study following more than 1,800 justice-involved youth, researchers at Northwestern University examined the long-term effects of “dose” of incarceration years after detention.
The ability to see doctors and other providers via telehealth improved low-income Medicaid participants’ access to care in Michigan.
Biologists at NJIT unearth a buried chapter in the evolution of dirt ants, uncovering first fossil evidence that one of Earth's stealthiest insects inhabited the Caribbean millions of years ago.
Students in the inaugural Invention Convention Florida at the University of South Florida competed for top honors in various grade-level categories, with more than 80 standout projects earning the opportunity to advance to the Invention Convention U.S. Nationals later this year.