The Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) is a global research center working to reduce poverty by ensuring that policy is informed by scientific evidence. Anchored by a network of more than 1,000 researchers at universities around the world, J-PAL conducts randomized impact evaluations to answer critical questions in the fight against poverty.
The Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) is a global research center working to reduce poverty by ensuring that policy is informed by scientific evidence. Anchored by a network of more than 1,000 researchers at universities around the world, J-PAL conducts randomized impact evaluations to answer critical questions in the fight against poverty.
Our affiliated professors are based at over 120 universities and conduct randomized evaluations around the world to design, evaluate, and improve programs and policies aimed at reducing poverty. They set their own research agendas, raise funds to support their evaluations, and work with J-PAL staff on research, policy outreach, and training.
Our research, policy, and training work is fundamentally better when it is informed by a broad range of perspectives.
This study experimentally tests the potential for intergroup contact to reduce prejudice in a conflict setting for the first time. I randomly assign Iraqi Christians displaced by ISIS to an all-Christian soccer team or to a team mixed with Sunni Arabs – who share the same ethno-religious background as ISIS. In the pilot, Christians assigned to mixed teams were 26.1 percentage points more likely to attend a Ramadan event three weeks after the intervention, 45.5 percentage points more likely to train with Muslims four months later, and 0.31 standard deviations more likely to believe that peaceful coexistence is possible. These findings suggest that cooperative contact within civic organizations can rebuild social trust over time. I propose a scale-up of the experiment that tracks outcomes among participants, their households, and the local community at large.