Impacts of the Measles Vaccine on Morbidity and Mortality
Maggie Greenberg and Ryan Panek ’26 with Alicia Atwood (Economics)
2024 Ford Scholars Project Summary
This summer we worked with Professor Atwood to examine the educational impact of the measles vaccine in Texas. Professor Atwood has previously studied the impact of the measles vaccine on employment and earnings in the U.S. in her 2022 paper. Professor Atwood and Professor Pearlman worked together on examining the impact of the measles vaccine on both schooling and labor market outcomes in Mexico in their paper from May 2024. Through our research this summer we seek to fill a missing link in her research by showing how the measles vaccine affects schooling in the U.S.
Our focus this summer is on Texas because it has a large amount of data available both on disease and education. Additionally, Texas being such a populous state is ideal because we have a wide range of counties, from very urban to very rural, that allows us to exploit variation in incidence rates of disease and population densities. We read through the medical literature on measles and found that it proves to be a unique disease to study because it is universal and causes “immune amnesia”. Universal means practically everyone will contract it at some point in their childhoods before the vaccine introduction. Immune amnesia means that when children contract measles not only do they get sick but their bodies lose the antibodies to other infectious diseases which then take about three to five years to rebuild. Therefore, once children have measles they are more likely to get sicker throughout their childhoods, which we would hypothesize has an impact on educational attainment.
Our work has included manually entering the data for the disease counts for a myriad of illnesses in every county in Texas from 1951 to 1977, as well as the attendance and related education data for the individual school districts from 1960 to 1971. We used Stata software to clean our data and run descriptive statistics. We also created maps and figures that highlighted case counts over time. Initially, we expected measles cases to experience an immediate drop-off when the vaccine was licensed but our data showed that a drop-off did not occur until a few years after the licensing. From there we worked on piecing together a puzzle of the history of the Texas vaccine rollout to figure out why this is. We sorted through hundreds of newspaper clippings, TV broadcast scripts, video footage, medical journals, and more to learn about who had access to the vaccine and when.
With all the information we have gathered this summer, we plan on writing an article about the measles vaccine rollout in Texas. Meanwhile, having uncovered Texas' complicated vaccination timeline, we are working towards a clearer picture of before and after periods so that we can run event studies and continue our statistical analysis. We hope our research can add to a story not just about the importance of vaccines but also about the need for large-scale federal policy to ensure the implementation of immunization efforts and healthcare as a whole.
Economic Litigation in the Classroom: Developing a Seminar on Economic Litigation
Abbe Colgan ’26 and Oliver Berger ’26 with Andrew Lemon (Economics)
2024 Ford Scholars Project Summary
This summer we worked closely with Professor Andrew Lemon ’00 to develop a 300-level seminar on economic litigation. The work consisted of three phases, and my research will continue into the fall.
As a seminar, the class meets once a week for two hours; each week, students will focus on one court case that uses economic theory to settle the dispute of alleged harm. We wanted to introduce students to different types of economic analysis plaintiffs and defendants use to advance their interests in the courtroom in cases ranging from antitrust to discrimination. In addition, we wanted this course to provide an understanding of the inner workings of a lawsuit, specifically the role of expert witnesses. To further this understanding, we choose to include the initial complaint, the expert witness' testimonies, and finally, the judge’s opinion as required reading for each case.
Once we decided on the course structure, we turned to finding the actual cases to include on the syllabus. The primary resource we used was Law360, a media site typically used by consulting firms and lawyers to stay updated with recent news in the legal field. It benefited our purposes because it is easy to navigate, and the site boasts summaries and documents related to many cases in the US court system. We were quickly able to scan complaints and read short articles to determine if the case would suit our goals for the course. We were looking at the category each case fell into, the presence of economic expert witnesses, and the fact that the case would use clear, accessible, and engaging economic analysis.
We combined ended up amassing just shy of 60 cases from Law360 that we thought would be interesting. Then, it was time to acquire the necessary documents. This proved to be the most challenging and most lengthy phase of our research. Complaints and Judge’s opinions are usually readily available, often on Law360 itself, but finding the expert reports was the most significant challenge. These reports are often filed under seal because they contain sensitive financial information concerning the parties involved. When filed under seal, the public cannot access the reports, making the case unusable for our purposes. Of the 57 cases we initially flagged as potential candidates, we only had all the documents for twelve.
The last phase of the research, which is still in progress and will continue this fall, is to start putting together the syllabus and discussion questions for the seminar. Each case has an average of 400 pages of reading between all the documents, so as we read these documents and ask ourselves what the most important part is, are there pages/paragraphs that can be cut from the required reading? What should the students taking this class focus on in their discussion? Are additional readings needed to supplement and explain the economic analysis used by the experts? As of August 5th we have gone through three of the cases, my tasks for the fall is to go through all the cases.
Working on this project was rewarding, and we learned a lot about how the economic theory we covered in our classes applies to the real world. We hope this seminar will become a favorite for economics students at Vassar.
Data Analysis for Behavioral Economics: Big Lies, Trading Favors, and Altruism and Attachment
Nathan Shih ’25 and Feng Wan ’26 with Benjamin Ho (Economics)
2024 Ford Scholars Project Summary
This summer, I, Nathan Shih ’25, had the pleasure of working with Professor Benjamin Ho and fellow scholar Charlie Wan ’25 on three behavioral economics projects: Big Lies, Trading Favors, and Altruism and Attachment. Our research involved analyzing data to explore the reception to and detection of lies, the factors that influence the reciprocity of favors, and the relationship between altruism and material attachment. These projects provided us with valuable insights into the complex interplay between human behavior and economic principles. The sections below outline a brief summary of each project.
Big Lies (Charlie Wan ’26)
This study aimed to look at the human ability to detect lies and how we perceive them. I began by reading “Is Journalistic Truth Dead? Measuring How Informed Voters Are About Political News” by Charles Angelucci and Andrea Prat, which provided essential data on voters' ability to distinguish between true and fake political news. Using the data they collected, I developed various GPT prompts and APIs to categorize their fake news stories into big lies, near-maximum lies, and small lies, using sample data from Politifact.com for training. After refining the prompts for accuracy, I analyzed the categorized data, revealing a balanced distribution across lie types. Logistic regression analyses then showed that big lies and near-maximum lies were less likely to be perceived as true compared to small lies. In addition, reflection scores suggested participants were more skeptical of big lies and reflected more positively on near-maximum lies.
Trading Favors (Charlie Wan ’26)
In this study, I investigated how the passage of time influences the likelihood of reciprocating a favor, and whether introducing additional “high cost” or “high benefit” incentives further mediates the effect of time. Basic regression analyses on survey-collected data revealed that while the passage of time significantly decreased the probability of returning a favor, “high cost” and “high benefit” incentives can counteract this effect. Including additional controls like altruism, risk, and trust - as well as performing stratified analyses based on factors such as context, gender, and student status - further validated the initial results. I then also explored whether the amount of time taken to request a follow-up favor influenced the completion of such follow-up requests. As expected, the results indicated that the amount of time taken to request a follow-up favor significantly affected whether an individual would actually complete it.
Altruism and Attachment (Nathan Shih ’25)
This final study explored the relationship between altruism and the endowment effect. Specifically, we examined whether altruistic behavior could mitigate the cognitive bias of overvaluing owned objects, and looked at whether other factors, such as high altruistic benchmarks and outward-focused framing, could further moderate this effect. Extensive data cleaning and analysis on survey-collected data confirmed the existence of the endowment effect and revealed that altruism, as well as a reminder of social norms and an outward change in perspective, does indeed play a small but significant role in reducing material attachment. This reduction in the endowment effect appears to be specifically due to a decrease in the amount individuals are willing to accept to part with their belongings, rather than an increase in the amount people are willing to pay for similar items. Furthermore, this finding seems to be more prominent with age, and abstract thinkers are particularly likely to experience this reduction in ownership bias.
Business Cycles ∓ Nativity Gaps
Abigail McLaughlin ’26 and Oliver Berger ’26 with Esteban Argudo (Economics)
2024 Ford Scholars Project Summary
This summer I worked with Professor Esteban Argudo in the economics department to explore the effect of business cycles on the income and employment nativity for immigrant and native populations in the United States. The ultimate goal was to formally quantify the differential effects of business cycles on labor market outcomes for native and immigrant populations.
I began by collecting data from the Current Population Survey (CPS) through IPUMS to complement the analysis done using the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) data. Since the time series dimension of the data analysis requires the harmonization of variables, IPUMS was the best option for data collection, despite the fact that it required new code.
I replicated figures from existing literature (Albert 2021) to ensure the IPUMS data (right) was the same as the raw CPS data (left).
Job Finding Rate Gap to Natives
There is a slight discrepancy between the figures, attributed to a difference in the number of observations. Since the Census Bureau releases the basic and supplement files as separate files and IPUMS integrates and releases the supplement files as a part of the data, IPUMS has slightly more observations.
The CPS data (right) was then used to complement the findings from the SIPP data (left). It indicated that the unemployment rate for immigrants was consistently higher than natives up until 2008. A similar story is true for wages, the average wage of immigrants becomes higher between 2010 and 2015. Further regression analysis and data visualization will help to explain why.
SIPP & CPS Data Skilled Workers Unemployment Rate
SIPP & CPS Data Skilled Workers Wages
My experience with this project reinforced the importance of data in forming a qualitative argument. Data provides numbers that tell a story, however, it is further analysis that explains what that story is.
Industrial Organization: Two-sided markets, network effect, and status quo bias
Julian Funaro ’25 and Cassandra Sisson ’26 with Qi Ge (Economics)
2024 Ford Scholars Project Summary
Julian Funaro ’25
This Summer, I have assisted Professor Qi Ge in his ongoing undergraduate level textbook project entitled Industrial Organization: Theory and Practice, 6th Edition. My work consisted of three key concepts to industrial organization.
Here are the final steps I took to conclude that it may be rational for the Yellow Pages to distribute the directories for free
First, I wrote an outline for a section on two-sided markets. Two-sided markets consist of one or more intermediaries, called platforms, that allow for transactions between two groups. For example, eBay is a platform that allows for transactions between buyers and sellers. Much of the required mathematics to model two-sided markets is not suitable for undergraduate economic students. Hence, my task was to select a basic model and derive the necessary math needed to find profit-maximizing prices for two-sided markets that can be understood by students who have taken an introductory class in microeconomics. Then, I used the model to explain the pricing strategies of Yellow Pages.
Next, I expanded the content on network economics. The network effect occurs when the value of a good or service increases as more people use it. For example, a larger number of agents on a social media platform increases the number of possible connections, thus increasing the potential benefit agents gain from joining the platform. We can describe a network with a graph consisting of a series of nodes connected by links. I used my knowledge in graph theory to help students' further understanding of network economics.
Finally, I wrote an outline for a section on status quo bias. In standard theory, agents are assumed to be rational. However, their bounded rationality limits their ability to make rational decisions all of the time. One shortcut agents use is a bias towards the status quo, resulting in many economic consequences.
Cassandra Sisson ’26
I will be continuing my research with Professor Ge in the Fall 2024 semester. Over the last eight weeks we have worked with Professor Ge to prepare for the release of the textbook Industrial Organization: Theory and Practice, 6th edition. Our work has included reviewing and summarizing different topics within industrial organization, updating figures within he text and in graphics, reading and reviewing papers and journal articles, summarizing court cases related to antitrust legislation, and researching economic models to determine which would work best in an educational environment. Price discrimination was a central theme to a lot of the work we did this summer, specifically how price discrimination is enabled by modern developments in business practices and legislation - specifically the growing use of subscription plans, and the use of network neutrality. These policies allow firms to more accurately price discriminate, and determine a more precise “willingness to pay” for their consumers. We also spent a good amount of time researching the economics of influencers, especially how they interact with practices in advertising like consumer targeted marketing. We found that influencers offer firms a unique opportunity to connect with a niche target audience, which further enables implementing personalized pricing strategies. We plan on continuing this project into the fall semester, so that we can have the textbook fully updated and ready for publishing by December. Our future work involves diving deeper into developments in antitrust litigation, and ensuring that facts and figures are as up to date as possible.
This summer I worked with Professor Sarah Pearlman and looked at the changing rates and demographics of migration from Mexico to the United States, and how they impacted the labor market. During the first half of the project, I focused mainly on the changing demographics of the people migrating. I began by collecting census data and ACS data from IPUMS and by cleaning data from the Mexican Migration Project. The Mexican Migration Project collected retrospective data from different regions in Mexico about peoples first and last trips to the United States, and began collecting data in 1986. Once I had collected data, I utilized Stata to create line graphs, bar graphs, and scatter plots to outline how the demographics of people migrating have changed since the early 1900s and found that, on average, migrants in recent decades were older and more educated. Through this process I also found just how impactful the Bracero program was in influencing the flow of migration and the impact on the labor force between 1942 and 1964. The Bracero program was a bilateral agreement between the United States and Mexico that provided temporary agricultural visas to Mexican workers and allowed them to come to the United States and return to Mexico multiple times over the course of two decades.
We also took a trip to Ellis Island to visit the immigration museum. At this museum, I was able to learn more about the general migration patterns in the US and much of my own research was confirmed by information present at the museum. I then moved over to mapping migration by US state to outline the areas in the US that were most impacted by the flows of migrants. This then evolved into mapping the flows of migrants by state and by industry as I sorted the data into groups of those working in agriculture, construction, and manufacturing. I concluded by beginning to look at wage regressions for Mexican born workers in the United States.
This summer, I worked with Professor Jaime Del Razo to study the efforts and effects of the United States military to recruit individuals directly from high school. Since the All-Volunteer Force (AVF) replaced the draft in 1973, the military has shifted its tactics to maintain its size and staffing requirements through recruitment. Such tactics include building relationships with high schools and accessing student information through policies like the NCLB (No Child Left Behind Act) and the ESEA (Elementary and Secondary Education Act). Because the AVF military competes with the labor market to meet its quota, schools and the military cooperate, allowing recruiters to sell the promise of education, health care, stable housing, and a respected career.
We examined the complex dynamic between the military, schools, and its students who have limited options following high school. We spent numerous hours at the West Point Military Academy’s Library seeking a broad range of sources that shed light on high school recruitment, contributing to the existing literature review in Professor Del Razo’s upcoming book. Additionally, we scoured research centers and DoD (Department of Defense) sources for more data on high school recruitment, as well as potential legislative changes in the National Defense Authorization Act that may impact males after turning 18 and potentially all genders. Lastly, we conducted a focus group interviewing veterans who were enlisted directly or shortly after high school. Following the focus group, I executed the first-round coding of the focus group data, searching for themes and patterns across the focus group participants.
This work especially mattered to Professor Del Razo and me because we are both products of the school-to-military pipeline. Through this gratifying research, the stories of many women and men I served with who were recruited from high school have earned a place in academics and a study of militarism in the United States.Academic Expectations and Play: How Early Childhood Educators Learn, Understand and Implement Curriculum
Academic expectations and play: How early childhood educators learn, understand and implement curriculum
This summer, I spent 8 weeks conducting research on early childhood education with Professor Erin McCloskey of the Education department. During these 8 weeks I observed three Pre-K classrooms in a Poughkeepsie school and researched aspects of early childhood education such as play, teaching methods, curriculum, and class environment.
The first five weeks of this project, I went to the school and observed the children while taking field notes of my observations. We utilized a more exploratory approach, meaning we did not have an initial research question or focus when we began observing. This flexibility allowed us to notice many different things rather than being limited into looking at one aspect or issue. One of the first observations I made was the expression of gender stereotypes and roles through play. An example of this is how the girls almost always took on caretaker or motherly roles in the group play dynamic. They would cook, clean, and take care of Baby Alive dolls whereas the boys did not display any of these behaviors. I also observed that the lack of male teachers and figures in the classroom may be leading to the boys feeling less connected to the teachers as they don’t relate in certain ways that the teachers and the girls do. This led to the question: How does the background and identity of teachers affect the learning environment and views of the children they teach?
The last three weeks of this project consisted of coding our field notes and reading books and articles pertaining to early childhood education and gender, identity, race, and other influential factors. This project really expanded my knowledge and experience of education and the early impact it has on children that may continue to influence them as they grow up. I was able to apply my psychology background and look at this from a behavioral perspective as well. Professor Erin McCloskey and I will continue to work together and write our findings to possibly be published later. Thank you, Erin, for this amazing experience. I will use all that I have learned for my future endeavors and experiences.FRANCES LEHMAN LOEB ART CENTER
This summer, I conducted full-time research for Curator of Photography, Jess Brier, in the Loeb. My findings will guide a future exhibition with the working title, Photo-Design: Making the World New, which highlights the ways in which communities have used photography and design to imagine alternative futures in the wake of profound loss and devastation.
For the first four weeks of my Ford experience, I explored promising case studies for Photo-Design. My research ranged anywhere from climate activism in Antarctica to the AIDS epidemic and queer activism in America. Jess encouraged me to pursue any historical moment that we could relate to unorthodox applications of photography and design. Although the initial breadth of the project was daunting, taking the time to explore every possible direction we could take the exhibition helped clarify what “photo-design” might look like and what specific historical moment I might want to focus on. The annotated bibliography I created during this period will guide future research on this exhibition.
For the second four weeks, I narrowed down my research topic to postwar, avant-garde architectural design in the 1960s and ’70s. My findings paid specific attention to the ways in which architects used photomontage, collage, and combination printing to articulate an evolving relationship between humans, nature, technology, and consumerism amidst global rebuilding projects. For example, I considered the rise of Metabolist architecture in Japan after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Italian architects' experimentation with “architecture-less architecture” as a reaction against the hyperrationality of pre-WWII, Modernist designs, and English architectural designs for the Golden Lane Estate rebuilding project of 1953. In addition to Japan, Italy, and England, my research also explored architectural design in America, Austria, and Venezuela in the postwar period. I identified over 60 artworks (both at the Loeb and other museums collections or archives) that might be included in the final exhibition.
This project culminated in a research report that amassed my extensive research into one cohesive document. My essay, notes, artwork proposals, and annotated bibliography will serve as vital references for Jess and future interns when work on Photo-Design resumes. Thank you, Jess, for your mentorship and this wonderful opportunity to explore my historical and creative interests in a museum setting.
During the past eight weeks, I worked with professors Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert and Michael Aronna on preparing the first volume of the Oviedo Project for publication. This is a long-term and large-scale project, spanning several years of translation work by other students (including other Ford scholars) of the thousands of pages of writings produced by Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo about the New World in his Historia General y Natural de las Indias (General and Natural History of the Indies). After many semesters of translating, editing, and revising, the first volume has been accepted for publication by Brill!
In order to finalize this first volume, I helped research and write footnotes for some of the volume’s early books. We first had to come up with a footnoting methodology, deciding which historical figures, places, mythological figures, and other references would be footnoted. We also had to decide a general pattern for the footnotes-how extensive they would be, and which format they would use. Because of the scale of the project and the extensiveness of our footnoting, we created a spreadsheet to keep track of our completed progress. I worked specifically on footnoting books two and four, which I completed. Each book contained numerous chapters. I periodically shared and discussed my work with my professors to ensure our agreement on the final footnotes, adding or removing any information we found necessary or irrelevant. Additionally, we combed through these books for small, final edits, such as the removal of contractions and ensuring the clarity of all translations.
In total, we finished editing about four of the nineteen books in the first volume. The volume should be ready to send to Brill by the end of February. It has been a pleasure and an honor to add my contributions to this incredible project.
History
Somos Vecinos (We are Neighbors) Poughkeepsie Oral History Project
Daniel Duque Hernandez ’27 and Karla Evangelista ’26 with Daniel Mendiola (History)
2024 Ford Scholars Project Summary
In the summer of 2024, Daniel Duque Hernandez ’27 and Karla Evangelista ’26 spent 6 weeks in Poughkeepsie as Ford Scholars for professor Daniel Mendiola’s initiative, Somos Vecinos. The oral history project comes from the premise that Latin American immigrants are vital to the Poughkeepsie community, and that making their stories available to others has the power of strengthening bonds by illuminating their experiences, memories, ideas and advice.
Daniel Duque Hernandez at Roatan Honduras Restaurant gathering camera footage for a promotional video
Daniel Duque Hernandez and Dr. Mendiola dedicated Fall 2023 and Spring 2024 to the preparation for the project. Their efforts included securing funding from the Consortium on Forced Migration Displacement and Education obtaining Institutional Review Board approval, drafting consent forms, initiating discussions with community members, and envisioning the project’s ultimate impact on Poughkeepsie and the Vassar community.
During this six-week period, we dedicated significant time to biking throughout Poughkeepsie to engage our neighbors in participating in our project. For the business owners who agreed to be part of the project, we scheduled and conducted interviews at the Chicago audio studio. We utilized the Audacity software to edit the recordings into our desired documentary style. The next step involved transcribing the interviews and translating them from Spanish to English, a lengthy process as we often had to rewind to hear the precise words they spoke, and choose the appropriate wording that would best match the sentence in Spanish.
The project concluded with 7 translations and transcriptions along with 5 mini promotional videos. Professor Mendiola made some final edits in order to finally upload all the interviews, along with some promotional videos we recorded and edited to Vassar’s digital library. We hope you have the opportunity to listen to them!
Our neighbors as we call them, told their narratives of resilience, perseverance, bravery, but most importantly, triumph. We know that everyone who listens to the stories shared, will find in their words a wellspring of wisdom.
This past April I presented a lecture recital through the music department that was entirely focused on a piece of music written by a phenomenal composer. The composer in question was Florence B. Price, who was the first female African American composer to have her music played by a major orchestra. The piece that has consumed my interest and undivided attention was her Piano Concerto in One Movement, and it had spent the entire year and summer beforehand in pursuit of understanding this complex work. While conducting research for my lecture recital, I quickly realized how much I had to uncover, and that many of the materials that I would need in order to better understand both the piece of music and Florence Price herself were unavailable to me.
This summer, my faculty sponsor Professor Jordon-Conlin and I decided that we would tackle this issue by taking our own trips to separate archives that held physical copies of her manuscripts, diaries, letter correspondences and other materials that would give us a better understanding of this complex musician and her works. My professor obtained the original handwritten parts of each instrument for Price’s piano concerto, as well as several letters, pictures and newspaper clippings from Price’s lifetime. Having these materials helped us to construct a more inclusive image of her past. I’ve included some examples of these materials below:While she went to Arkansas, I embarked on my own journey to Chicago to find what would become one of the most interesting piece of parchment I have ever held: her original three piano manuscript for her piano concerto. The Center for Black Music Research contained multitudinous manuscripts and artifacts from her life, including the three piano version of her piano concerto that I had been searching for since this last summer. Having access to this piece, along with several other original first edition manuscripts of her music allowed me to more appropriately cross reference and garner a better understanding of her composition style and habits.
This past summer, I worked alongside Professor Ortiz-Hinojosa. We worked on a few projects that relate to 'Latin American' Philosophy. There is a lot of discourse around what is considered 'Latin America', and consequently what is considered to be 'Latin American' Philosophy'. We attempted not to define it, but rather to try and expand possible meanings and interpretations in this field of study.
For the first portion of this project, I transcribed The Aztec-Spanish Dialogues of 1524. This document is filled with theological discussion between the Nahuas and the Spaniards, and more interestingly, it is made up of fragments of oral traditions from pre- and post colonial times. Though the document was already translated, we hope that this version is distributed and used for further dissemination-as a focus of this time period-to ground this old, but relevant and continuous discussion.
For the second portion of the project I put together an annotated bibliography consisting of various primary, secondary, and other sources from pre-colonial, colonial, and post colonial times. Though they vary all the way from Indigenous documents to Afro-Caribbean discussion to first-hand accounts of Spaniards, the connection between these documents is that they have an interconnected history and significance to the field of 'Latin America'. We hope that this source can help other scholars interested in learning more about 'Latin America' and can expand their understanding of what can be considered to be 'Latin American' philosophy.
For the final portion of this project I set out to explore the relationship between Corridos, a music genre, and the sentiment of a nation, in this case, Mexico. In the same way that there is not one way to define 'Latin America' or how it is viewed or studied, the Corrido genre does not have one definitive sound. Corridos can come in the form of rancheras, mariachi, banda, norteñas, duranguense, and many other forms. While there are shared musical elements between these genres, what truly makes them Corridos is the stories of heroes and survival that they tell.
This summer myself, Professor Arpitha Kodiveri and Jacques Abou-Rizk (a fellow researcher) analyzed the current state of climate damage-based litigation, with a specific emphasis on damages caused by heatwave events, both domestic and international. The field of climate litigation is rapidly growing and contrasting the accessibility of these kinds of legal remedies in richer countries versus poorer ones sheds light on the inequality that is pervasive throughout the climate action world. While some countries see this litigation as a silver bullet for climate change, our research indicated otherwise for the time being.
Old Town Portland, a neighborhood in the Northwest section of the City where we stayed. It was heavily impacted by the 2021 Heatwave Event
We focused our domestic research on an ongoing climate suit out of Multnomah, OR against fossil fuel major Exxon Mobil. The county alleges that Exxon knowingly engaged in the sale and production of fossil fuel products despite the adverse climate impacts that would follow. The county alleges that Exxon’s actions directly contributed to a deadly 2021 heatwave event in the region. While visiting Portland we were able to meet with local climate activists and professors who shed light on the unprecedented speed of the case. Unlike most suits of its kind, the case in Oregon has avoided being escalated to the federal level, despite Exxon’s wishes, and will continue in a more favorable jurisdiction. The county is seeking $50 million in damages, $1.5 billion for future damages, and $50 billion for an abatement fund aimed at preventing future heat waves. PWhile the case, and litigation more generally, seems promising, we contrasted it with situations like the one in Bangladesh, which experienced a heatwave in the spring of 2024 where average temperatures broke 105°. Litigation is much less viable in these regions due to the lack of funding and public attention. Our research concluded that accessibility must be prioritized if litigation is to be an effective remedy internationally.