Discrimination is common nationwide—and even more so for Black, Indigenous, Latinx and Asian Minnesotans

Minnesota is home to some of the nation’s worst race-based disparities in employment and homeownership—and it is where George Floyd was murdered at the hands of police, sparking a national reckoning. Could that be because discrimination is worse in Minnesota? According to one recent survey the answer is: Quite possibly, yes.

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Minnesota's Diverse Communities Survey: What? Why? And how?

The murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis sparked major racial reckoning around the world. If it wasn’t obvious before that day that Minnesotans needed to better understand one another across racial and ethnic lines, it certainly was after. Minnesota’s Diverse Communities is a public opinion survey that aims to elevate the collective voices of communities that are typically underrepresented.

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Craig Helmstetter
Blue states may reach herd immunity sooner than Red states

Over the last few weeks the United States’ progress on vaccinating its population against COVID-19 has slowed, as have the associated prognostications as to when the country will reach herd immunity—or even whether we will ever reach the level of vaccination necessary to be functionally free of the virus. Given the initial excitement and high demand for vaccination, we sought to find why things have slowed down.

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Kristine Liao
Who voted in Georgia’s runoff elections?

Georgia’s voters handed control of the U.S. Senate to Democrats on Jan. 5 by flipping its two Senate seats in the runoff elections. The runoff election results are historic and bear significant implications for what a Biden administration can achieve. So, who among Georgia’s electorate turned out to vote on Jan. 5 to deliver such significant wins?

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Craig Helmstetter