1. How can communities best bridge the digital divide?

    Over the next three years, the team will focus their research on resource-constrained communities in Detroit’s Eastside neighborhood and a refugee resettlement agency that serves a public housing community in Ypsilanti, Michigan.

  2. Undergrads: Here’s your chance to conduct research in Detroit in 2022

    Students receive $2,500-3,500 stipend award, depending on financial need, and are provided housing at Wayne State University. Program related transportation costs are also covered by the DCERP.

  3. Q&A: Mary Janevic on improving the health of older adults in Detroit

    “Detroit in particular has been hard-hit by the pandemic, with a COVID-19 death rate more than three times Michigan’s overall rate.”

    ~ Mary Janevic, associate research scientist, School of Public Health

  4. What lies beneath: Detroit River narratives emerge through schooner trips, boat building

    The Detroit River is saturated with stories. Designated as a Heritage River by both the U.S. and Canadian governments, the river and its wetlands were once vital habitat for fish and wildlife hunted by the People of the Three Fires and immortalized by their legends. 

  5. Dara Hill finds resonating way to share research

    “I will tell you this: When I published articles about this topic, no one was like, ‘I want to read it! How can I read it? With the film, I had so many people who couldn’t make it to the festival writing me, saying, ‘I want to see it! How can I see it?’”

    ~ Dara Hill, associate professor of reading and language arts in the College of Education, Health, and Human Services at UM-Dearborn

  6. Detroit-area speaker encourages churches to be more welcoming

    John Thorne said systemic and institutional racism can permeate the hallowed halls of the church, and it is up to congregations and pastors to ensure their place of worship is inviting.

  7. Alum Noam Kimelman shares the secret to building true community

    These friendships and real experiences are what finally taught Kimelman his most important life lesson to date: that his views on what Detroit needed were not necessarily what the people who lived there every day needed — from him or the organization he built.

  8. Census undercounted population in select Detroit neighborhoods by 8%

    If undercounts of a similar magnitude occurred in a majority of the city’s more than 600 block groups, the potential undercount could be in the tens of thousands.

  9. And justice for all: Amanda Alexander brings racial justice front and center

    “The past three and a half years of running the Detroit Justice Center have really driven home the importance of putting questions of incarceration front and center when we’re thinking about the future of the city.”

    ~ Amanda Alexander