UNH Today

NH Business Review: UNH study finds inequity in pandemic-related job loss and recovery

According to the study conducted by Rogelio SĂĄenz, a policy fellow at the Carsey School and professor of demography at the University of Texas at San Antonio, and Corey Sparks, associate professor of demography at the University of Texas at San Antonio, people of color and women have experienced higher unemployment than whites and men during the Covid-19 pandemic, and women of color and Latina immigrants have the highest jobless rates.

Dust in the Wind

UNH scientists have been awarded a Rapid Response Research (RAPID) grant from the National Science Foundation to advance our understanding of extreme, global-scale events on tropical ecosystems.

Tehran Times: Iran-China partnership to be better for Iran in short run

Kurk Dorsey, professor within the Carsey School of Public Policy,Ìębelieves that in the short run, the deal between China and Iran will be better for Iran than for China, because Iran will be able to sell its oil at a time of low demand.Ìę“In the short run, the deal between China and Iran will be better for Iran than for China, because Iran will be able to sell its oil at a time of low demand,” explained Dorsey.

Laconia Daily Sun: ‘Perfect poison’ lingers in NH homes

New Hampshire’s lead poisoning rate is twice the national average, according to a 2019 report by New Hampshire Listens, a research project of the Âé¶čapp’s Carsey School of Public Policy. Each year, roughly 600 New Hampshire children are diagnosed with elevated lead in their bloodstream, amounts of a toxic metal that exceed the levels found in 97.5 percent of American children, according to data from NH DHHS and the Pediatric Environmental Health Center at Boston Children’s Hospital.