Recently, researchers representing teams funded by Evidence for Action, Policies for Action, and Systems for Action joined Andrea Serano with Reaching Our Sisters Everywhere to discuss their experiences conducting research to advance the health and wellbeing of birthing people and their babies.
The authors provide an overview of major research challenges and possible approaches to delivering convincing evidence on the health effects of Supreme Court decisions.
The authors discuss how racial equity frameworks and processes help ensure that research is conducted in an equitable way, from asking the right research questions to sharing them with the people that can use them to create change.
This month’s blog highlights great reads to consider adding to your own reading list. We feature the top posts from our own blog, interesting posts from our favorite blogs, and a selection of books.
In conversation with qualitative methodologists at E4A – Drs. Charles H. Lea, Jeana E. Morrison, and Terrell Winder – the authors outline considerations, challenges, and research questions that may be addressed through qualitative work under the current racial equity call for proposals.
A discussion of the inherent tradeoffs of various causal inference research approaches, which may become even more pronounced when conducting research focused on advancing racial equity.
Highlights from a few of the engaging conversations that took place during a recent grantee meeting of the Research-Evaluation-Learning unit of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF).