Seeking Solutions for Today’s Issues — and Tomorrow’s With an equity lens, faculty pursue research on plastic pollution, transportation access, mortgage lending and youth empowerment
By Stan Paul
The outcome of the 2024 national election will impact our nation and world for decades to come, and during this critical time, UCLA Luskin remains committed to — and actively engaged in — research that addresses pressing global, national, regional and local issues.
One UCLA Luskin research initiative is focused on civic engagement among young people who will be determining the direction of the nation through their vote. Others are investigating housing access and affordability, transportation access, the environment and other issues that intersect the fields of urban planning, social welfare and public policy.
Amid rising costs and declining state funding for the University of California system, external funding sources large and small allow individual scholars and UCLA Luskin-affiliated research centers to continue to pursue important and timely research on numerous policy issues.
During the 2023-2024 fiscal year, donors committed $856.5 million — the second-highest fundraising total in UCLA history. Alumni and friends of the university came forward with more than 68,000 gifts, 94% of which were less than $10,000. The Luskin School’s fundraising efforts brought in $7,811,898 of that total.
Here is a spotlight on faculty research made possible by this funding:
Mitigating Plastics Through an Environmental Justice Lens
Plastics are all around us — and in us. It’s in our water and soil, the food and water we consume, and the products and packaging that we use on a daily basis. However, some communities are more negatively impacted, or plastic burdened, than others, according to work being conducted by UCLA Luskin researchers.
Veronica Herrera, associate professor of urban planning and political science, and Daniel Coffee MPP ’20, a project manager at the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation (LCI), received funding through LCI from the Resources Legacy Fund Foundation to define and map the plastics burden in California and its communities.
In 2022, California Gov. Gavin Newsom approved SB-54, a bill that would establish the Plastic Pollution Prevention and Packaging Producer Responsibility Act. The law requires producers to ensure that 100% of single-use packaging and plastic food service ware sold in California is recyclable or compostable by 2032, and will provide about $500 million annually for the California Plastic Pollution Mitigation Fund to help communities affected by plastic.
While SB-54 is one of the most comprehensive laws of its kind, there are concerns by environmental justice organizations that the money may not be equitably distributed to communities most impacted by plastic pollution.
“Our research creates an environmental justice framework to help decision makers route the mitigation funds toward communities most disproportionately impacted by plastic pollution, which are communities of color and low-income,” Herrera said.
The report defines the plastics burden as being threefold: site-based exposures (living or working near plastics industrial facilities), dietary exposures (such as via processed foods) and consumer products exposures (such as through personal care products), and shows how these exposures are more likely to present disproportionate impacts on communities of color. Herrera and Coffee have also created a geospatial map that shows the site-based exposures on California’s communities for facilities such as landfills and plastics recyclers.
“Our report stresses that some communities are more likely to be doubly or triply burdened and also have pre-existing vulnerabilities in dealing with these burdens, such as lower access to health care,” Herrera said.
“We want to continue to add to the mapping tool to expand our measures of the plastics burden. Maybe this will inspire researchers in other states to get data to replicate what we are doing for California. More data on the plastics burden will help policymakers make real change.”
Removing Obstacles to Transportation Access
Transportation is not equally accessible or distributed equitably across regions. The lack of reliable and affordable transportation only adds to socioeconomic inequities for low-income communities and individuals, especially for people of color.
Researchers at the Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs are studying the effects of a novel approach — universal basic mobility (UBM) — to address financial barriers to reliable transportation. UBM was recently piloted in a small number of cities nationwide, including Los Angeles.
Madeline Brozen, co-principal investigator and deputy director of the Lewis Center, is leading the team that is analyzing the effectiveness of the L.A. pilot program, also known as mobility wallets. Researchers at UC Davis also are working with UCLA to complete the comprehensive mixed-methods evaluation examining travel trends, experiences and spending for pilot programs in Los Angeles.
The initial pilot program, launched in 2023 by the city of Los Angeles, with partners LA Metro and the Los Angeles Department of Transportation, is the largest UBM pilot to date. This first phase provided $150 a month to 1,000 participants in South Los Angeles. According to Brozen, a second phase started last fall and also includes 1,000 people from South Los Angeles but has been expanded to include an additional 1,000 participants from throughout Los Angeles County.
Brozen explained that the UBM works like universal basic or guaranteed income in the form of a prepaid debit card, which can be used for a range of transportation options. These include city buses, bikeshare and e-scooters as well as ride-hail servicesincluding Uber and Lyft and Amtrak for more regional travel.And the wallets are being used, she noted. The programshave tracked thousands of transportation transactions since the program began.
So far, the results have been promising. Brozen is working with Lewis Center Director and longtime Luskin Urban Planning Professor Evelyn Blumenberg, as well as Urban Planning PhD students who are assisting with analyzing the experiment’s results.
“People know this is a one-year program. So, they’re not going to change their behavior really drastically for a temporary support,” Brozen said. “Most people have figured out how to get to their job, how to get their groceries, but a lot of times, it’s the trips they aren’t making.”
These include trips that people with reliable transportation may take for granted, like having the ability to see family and friends. It also helps with trips that would normally be expensive, long and in places where transportation would become burdensome for them.
An additional benefit is that program participants are allowed to use the wallet for themselves or anyone else, such as a child that requires transportation, Brozen explained. The mobility wallets give participants options that provide both stress relief and budget relief.
“It gives them autonomy. … There’s improvement to people’s lives,” she said.
Investigating Barriers to Home Ownership
Buying a new home has been challenging for most people before — and, even more so, after —the COVID-19 pandemic. But for low-income people, that dream has moved almost beyond reach.
A two-year grant has allowed UCLA Luskin’s José Loya to examine those barriers for low-income people as they seek upward social mobility through homeownership. Loya, an assistant professor of urban planning, received the grant asa 2023-25 Emerging Poverty Scholarship Fellow through theUniversity of Wisconsin’s Institute for Research on Poverty. Loya, also a faculty affiliate with UCLA’s Chicano Studies Research Center, said that the first part of his research is to investigate the relationship between low-income households and homeownership, and barriers in the search for upward social mobility.
Working with Luskin PhD students, he is already seeing some interesting results:
“We see that low-income individuals are heavily constrained in the mortgage market, which limits their home ownership opportunities more broadly,” he said. “That’s both at the individual and community levels. So low-income communities also face very large barriers to accessing or to improving or to increasing ownership opportunities in their neighborhoods as well.”
Another factor is that high home prices coupled with higher interest rates has an impact on whether financial institutions are willing to lend to lower-income individuals, pricing them out of the market.
“The monthly payment itself is just too high to afford homeownership under current circumstances,” Loya said.
A second aspect of the research has been to examine the impact of neighborhood poverty on appraised home values. He explained that while home values are typically thought of as based on the actual home and land, appraised values also are a reflection of community resources.
“And this has a dramatic impact on lower-income neighborhoods or minority neighborhoods that often are neglected when it comes to public investment,” Loya said.
Loya also noted that housing studies for lower-income people has typically focused on rental markets because the majority of low-income residents are renters.
“However, the next stage for upward social mobility is signaled by homeownership, the largest vehicle for generating wealth,” he said. “When we think about low-income households and neighborhoods, essentially we want to determine or assess the opportunities that they have for homeownership and other ways of generating wealth.”
This is where Loya’s research comes in.
“I’m able to look at that intersection of wealth building through homeownership and poverty research,” he said, pointing out that poverty or household income is not static.
“We know that incomes fluctuate, opportunities fluctuate, and homeownership is a good marker of mobility,” he said, explaining, “When people view homeownership as an opportunity, do families have access to it?”
Understanding Youth Civic Engagement and Opportunities
Generations are given labels, stereotyped and defined, and each generation is actively engaged in defining itself.
Professor of Social Welfare Laura Wray-Lake is in the third year of research funded by AmeriCorps to assess civic engagement among young people and understand experiences of youth activists with different social identities.
Her research is multi-pronged. In partnership with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Wray-Lake is looking at survey data from a large sample of youth advocates, which she said will help in understanding “some of the factors that differentiate the way that young people are engaged and the different issues that interest them.”
Another aspect of that work involves evaluating the ACLU’s National Advocacy Institute, a one-week summer training program for youth advocates, to find ways the institute made a difference for participants. Wray-Lake and colleagues surveyed young people who went through the institute before and after the training along with a follow-up six months later.
The findings are showing that institute participants increased their civic knowledge, agency and likelihood of action one week after the institute, relative to a comparison group of civically engaged young people who did not participate in the program, and some of the effects are maintained six months later.
A third part of her AmeriCorps-funded work involves a longitudinal study to map out trajectories of how young people become activists. Over three years starting in 2023, Wray-Lake is tracking 1,000 young participants, ages 14-18, as they transition to adulthood and move on to college or other paths.
“Adolescents are really engaged and really involved in a lot of different issues,” including racial justice, women’s rights, LGBTQ issues, and justice here and abroad related to conflict in the Middle East, Wray-Lake said.
Wray-Lake said the young people she studies represent a general sample and weren’t recruited because they were civically engaged. But she said that the vast majority are engaged in at least one issue.
“Young people today are paying attention. They care about many different things. And so I think the way that relates to the election is they’re looking for which candidates are really speaking to the issues that they’re interested in.
“I’ve noticed that young people have gotten more motivated since Kamala [Harris] has joined in, but they also have issues and interests that neither candidate is really speaking to. I think that’s a piece that’s important.”
And although the youngest of the participants who were surveyed cannot yet vote, their views still matter and their actions can make a difference, she said.
“There might be ways they’re participating, like sharing their views on social media or with friends and family, and some of them might be campaigning for the candidates,” Wray-Lake said, adding that people don’t have to be 18 to be an active citizen.
“The motivation for doing what I do is showing how teenagers can be contributors to society and their communities. They have ideas, they have motivation, and they actually make real change in their communities through youth-led movements and organizations that they’re part of.”
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