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Michael A. Stoll   
Ph.D. in Urban Studies and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 

Chair, Department of Public Policy
Professor of Public Policy and Urban Planning
Associate Director , Center for the Study of Urban Poverty
 
Phone: 310-206-4774
Fax: 310-206-0337
mstoll@ucla.edu 

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Michael A. Stoll is Professor and Chair of Public Policy in the School of Public Affairs, and Associate Director of the Center for the Study of Urban Poverty, at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He received his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Urban Planning and a BS in Political Economy from the University of California, Berkeley. He also served as a Visiting Scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation in New York City. His main research interests include the study of urban poverty and inequality (specifically the interplay of labor markets, race/ethnicity, geography and policy), and crime and prisons.

Dr. Stoll’s published work includes an examination of the labor market difficulties of less-skilled workers, in particular the role that racial residential segregation, job location patterns, job skill demands, employer discrimination, job competition, transportation job information and criminal records play in limiting employment opportunities. Much of this work has been featured in a variety of media outlets including NPR, PBS, ABC Chicago Talk Radio, the Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and the New York Times, among other outlets.

Currently, Dr. Stoll is working on major research projects that examine the labor market consequences of mass incarceration, the benefits and costs of the prison boom, the reasons for the prison boom in the U.S., the social and economic consequences of urban sprawl, and the sources and consequences of differences in auto insurance premiums and traffic patterns within metropolitan areas.

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Selected Publications:  

2009. Do Prisons Make Us Safer? The Benefits and Costs of the Prison Boom, (edited with Steven Raphael), New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.

2008. “The Effect of Criminal Background Checks on Hiring Ex-Offenders,” (with Shawn Bushway), Criminology and Public Policy, 7(3): 371-404.

2007. Barriers to Reentry? The Labor Market for Released Prisoners in Post-Industrial America, (edited with David Weiman and Shawn Bushway), New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation. (Selected as a Noteworthy Book in Industrial Relations by Princeton University’s Industrial Relations Section.)

2007. “Redlining or Risk: A Spatial Analysis of Auto Insurance Premiums in Los Angeles,” (with Paul Ong), Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 26(4): 8111-829.

2007. “Immigration and Civic Engagement in a Multi-Ethnic and Multi-Racial Context,” (with Janelle Wong), International Migration Review, 41(4): 880-908.

2006. “Job Sprawl, Spatial Mismatch and Black Employment Disadvantage,” Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 25(4): 827-854.

2006. “Perceived Criminality, Criminal Background Checks and the Racial Hiring Practices of Employers,” (with Steven Raphael and Harry J. Holzer), Journal of Law and Economics, 49(2): 451-480.