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On the connection between food insecurity and mental health — what the data says, why hunger is never only a physical problem, and why the conversation is overdue.
Food security Mental health EssayI am a doctoral candidate in Public Affairs and Community Development at Rutgers University – Camden, a research associate at the Senator Walter Rand Institute for Public Affairs, and an adjunct faculty member in Sociology at Salem Community College. My research unfolds along two parallel tracks.
In my academic work, I take a mixed-methods approach to examine how nonprofit organizations sustain themselves within shifting political environments — what allows some to endure, adapt, and remain accountable to their missions, and what pushes others into decline.
My public scholarship moves in the opposite direction: rather than asking how institutions survive policy, it asks how policy lands on the ground. I study the reflections of public policy across everyday domains — transportation, community health, public safety, and food insecurity — to understand what it actually feels like to live inside the decisions made on our behalf.
You can find the more formal work in Publications, the public-facing projects and reports alongside it, and occasional notes on reading, teaching, and fieldwork in the Notebook.
My work appears in peer-reviewed journals and edited volumes, and also in local reports, policy briefs, and community-facing projects.
Examines how immigration governance in the United States was reshaped after September 11, 2001, tracing the institutional shift toward a securitized framing of immigration policy and its consequences for migrants and the agencies that manage them.
Revisits the 2016 EU–Turkey agreement on migration, analyzing its negotiation, implementation, and limitations as a case study in how migration crises are managed across competing political jurisdictions.
Traces the structural and economic forces that drove Mexican migration to the United States from the 1970s onward, situating individual migration decisions within the larger arc of bilateral policy and regional economic change.
A comprehensive assessment of community health needs across AtlantiCare's service region, synthesizing public data, stakeholder input, and community voices to identify priorities for health systems planning in southern New Jersey.
An exploratory study of how public libraries in southern New Jersey are increasingly functioning as sites of social service delivery, and what it would take to formally expand social work capacity within library systems.
A community-informed analysis of transportation needs across Camden County, translating resident priorities into concrete recommendations for local and county-level decision-makers.
Examines the barriers residents face when accessing transportation across southern New Jersey, the downstream effects on employment, health, and daily life, and the considerations that should guide future investment.
A regional study of what it actually takes to find and keep work in southern New Jersey — the frictions, supports, and structural conditions shaping the job search for residents of the region.
Across these projects I draw on mixed-methods research strategies and grounded theory — combining interviews, focus groups, surveys, and administrative data to build analyses that stay close to the communities and institutions the work is meant to serve.
Evaluation of a toolkit designed to strengthen food pantry operations and the nutritional quality of food distributed to clients.
Community-level profiles and data snapshots supporting the county's overdose fatality review process, translating complex data into accessible products for local decision-makers.
Parallel community profile and data work supporting Burlington County's overdose fatality review team, grounded in local context and county-specific patterns.
External evaluation of the Center for Computational and Integrative Biology's NSF-funded National Research Traineeship program, examining program design, participant outcomes, and interdisciplinary training.
Evaluating the impact of the Collective Impact design and Collective-initiated programs on food security outcomes across Camden City.
Comprehensive community health needs assessment for AtlantiCare's service region, drawing on public data, stakeholder engagement, and community input to inform health systems planning.
Multi-year evaluation of the Clayton Model's pilot and expansion phases, tracking implementation, outcomes, and scalability over a four-year window.
Examining the environmental-justice conditions, residency patterns, and structural barriers faced by residents of Camden's Waterfront South neighborhood.
Evaluation of a medical-legal partnership embedded in a clinical care setting, assessing how integrated legal services shape health and well-being outcomes for patients.
Community health needs assessment for Inspira Health, synthesizing quantitative data and community voices into actionable priorities for the region.
A cross-county study of how residents of southern New Jersey perceive violence and safety in their communities, and how those perceptions relate to local conditions and policy.
A slower, less formal place. I post occasionally — usually when something I'm reading, teaching, or working on won't leave me alone.