Biography
Stevie Marvin (they/them) is a research assistant with the Economic Policy Institute’s Program on Race, Ethnicity, and the Economy (PREE). Marvin joined EPI in January 2023 after completing their undergraduate degree at American University. They support the PREE team through data collection, analysis, and visualization for articles and blog posts.
Education
B.A., Economics, American University
By Content:
By Area of Research:
By Type:
-
States must safeguard language access for AAPI communities as Trump undermines federal protections
-
How Trump’s erasure of environmental data is endangering communities of color
-
Trump attacks on federal agencies have steep implications for Black workers
-
Workers of color made historic gains over the last five years, but Trump’s anti-worker and anti-equity agenda threatens to reverse this progress
-
Why we have to keep talking about reparations in 2025
-
How trends in American Indian and Alaska Native population growth impact employment data
-
Behind the numbers of Hispanic employment: A strong labor market has delivered historic gains, but differences remain among demographic groups
-
Examining the economic impact of language proficiency on AAPI populations
-
Native American child poverty more than doubled in 2022 after safety net cutbacks: Child poverty rate is higher than before the pandemic
-
The strong labor market recovery has helped Hispanic workers, but the end of economic relief measures has worsened income and poverty disparities
-
Broad child poverty data for the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander population don’t tell the whole economic story