Output list
Report
Idaho at a Glance: Wastewater and Drinking Water Systems in Idaho
Published 07/31/2025
2
Wastewater systems collect and treat water that flows from indoor uses, such as homes
and businesses. Drinking water systems supply safe, reliable drinking water to homes,
businesses and other structures requiring water service. This Idaho at a Glance focuses
on domestic wastewater and drinking water systems and excludes industrial systems,
except where specified.
Report
Wastewater and Drinking Water Systems in Idaho: Infrastructure Needs, Growth and Workforce
Published 05/30/2025
This report describes the current landscape of wastewater and drinking water systems in Idaho, including infrastructure needs, growth and the workforce. This report focuses on systems that treat wastewater from and provide drinking water for domestic uses and excludes industrial systems, except where specified.
Report
Idaho at a Glance: Population Change in Idaho
Published Summer 2025
14, 1
Populations change due to a combination of migration, births and deaths. Population change is the difference between all new residents in Idaho, including babies born and people moving in, and those who died or moved away. Population totals are estimates by the U.S. Census Bureau based on census counts, household surveys and other government data. These estimates are updated annually using new data and every decade based on census counts.
Report
IDAHO AT A GLANCE: Refugees in Idaho
Published 10/2024
2
A refugee is someone who has fled their home country and is unable to return due to “persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion”1. The United States Refugee Resettlement Act (1980) created a permanent process for the U.S. to admit and support refugees, which is implemented in partnership with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).2 The U.S. permanently resettles refugees in all states, including Idaho.2,3
Report
IDAHO AT A GLANCE: Unauthorized Immigrants and Idaho’s Economy
Published 06/2024
1
Unauthorized immigrants contribute to Idaho’s economy through their work in industries such as agriculture, services and construction, as well as through their everyday spending. Unauthorized immigrants pay taxes and are ineligible for most taxpayer-funded programs.
Report
The Unauthorized Immigrant Workforce and Idaho's Economy
Published 02/19/2024
This report describes Idaho’s unauthorized workforce and how their work, spending and taxes relate to Idaho’s economy. The University of Idaho James A. and Louise McClure Center for Public Policy Research examined existing data and research on unauthorized immigrants, both nationally and in Idaho. The most recent data on the number of unauthorized immigrants in the United States and Idaho are from 2021, with more detailed data only available for earlier years.1 This report summarizes conclusions from existing data and does not update estimates or collect new quantitative data. It integrates perspectives and up-to-date information on Idaho’s unauthorized workforce from Idaho professionals in agriculture, dairy and hospitality industries. The McClure Center conducts independent, evidence-based research. Publications contain no policy recommendations.
Journal article
COVID-19 experiences of small-scale fishing households: The case of Lake Victoria, Kenya
Published 02/02/2023
Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 6
Introduction: The impact of COVID-19 on small-scale fishing communities is of great concern given the importance of aquatic foods in trade, nutrition and livelihoods. Using a case study of Lake Victoria, augmented by published literature, we examine the socioeconomic dynamics and severity of COVID-19 impacts on Kenyan fishing communities.
Methods: A household level questionnaire was administered through phone interviews on a monthly basis from June 2020 to May 2021, including a focus group discussion in July 2021.
Results: We find that multifold fear of COVID-19 infection and control measures were present and varied across case rates and stringency of control measures. Fishers and traders reported being affected by disease control measures that limited market access and their ability to fish overnight. In spite of these worries, and contrary to what has been reported in the published literature regarding impacts observed in the early months of the pandemic, we see stable participation in fishing and fish trading over time despite the pandemic. Food insecurity was high before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, but did not substantially shift with the pandemic.
Conclusion: Our findings suggest that Kenyan fishing and fish trading households adopted diverse strategies to cope and balance generating income to provide for their families and staying safe. Our results underscore the need to understand ways in which acute pandemic impacts evolve over time given that effects are likely heterogeneous across small-scale fishing communities.
Journal article
Building research capacity in an under-represented group: The STAARS program experience
Published 12/01/2022
Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy, 44, 4, 1925 - 1941
For decades, the lack of high-quality empirical economic research on the state of Africa's agriculture and rural economies has been an important factor impeding the formulation of evidence-based policy on the continent. The Structural Transformation of African Agriculture and Rural Spaces program aims to build a critical mass of early career African scholars and policy research through an emphasis on mentorship and professional development to help remedy that deficiency. This paper explains the motivations, origins, and outcomes to date of the program, and offers lessons learned for others wishing to create research capacity development opportunities for under-represented groups.
Book
Socio-Technical Innovation Bundles for Agri-Food Systems Transformation
Published 2022
This open access book is the result of an expert panel convened by the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability and Nature Sustainability. The panel tackled the seventeen UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for 2030 head-on, with respect to the global systems that produce and distribute food. The panel’s rigorous synthesis and analysis of existing research leads compellingly to multiple actionable recommendations that, if adopted, would simultaneously lead to healthy and nutritious diets, equitable and inclusive value chains, resilience to shocks and stressors, and climate and environmental sustainability.
Journal article
Small-scale fishing households facing COVID-19: The case of Lake Victoria, Kenya
Published 05/01/2021
Fisheries Research, 237, 105856
Small-scale fisheries underpin the aquatic food supply, and are facing acute challenges in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. The study aimed to examine how small-scale fishing households, including fishers and fish traders, are responding to COVID-19 and associated movement restrictions around Lake Victoria, Kenya. We conducted phone interviews with 88 households in three riparian communities around Lake Victoria to examine shifts in fish consumption, fishing activities, price changes, and coping strategies. We found that households are consuming less fish, perceiving high fish prices, and coping by more often selling than eating fish. Most fishers and traders reported spending less time fishing and trading, and concern about being infected with COVID-19 was high. Our findings suggest movement restrictions and COVID-19 concern, along with high lake levels in the region, may limit fishing activities and fish access. Controlling COVID-19 and supporting opportunities for fishers and traders to safely return to their livelihood activities will be paramount to the recovery of small-scale fishing communities today. Our findings can also support planning to mitigate the impacts of future crises on small-scale fishing communities.