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Our Work

See what we’re building right now. Our projects reflect our research-to-action model, connecting community knowledge, rigorous research, and decision-making to support more equitable outcomes across Chicago and beyond. Through long-term partnerships, applied research, and strategic convenings, these initiatives move insights into policy and practice.

Rethinking TIF Districts: When the Model Falls Short

Developed in partnership with Claretian Associates, with support from Fifth Third Bank.

This project examines how Chicago’s primary development tool performs in communities facing long-term disinvestment. Grounded in South Chicago, it brings together community knowledge, policy analysis, and research translation to surface how structural inequities shape investment outcomes and inform more equitable approaches.

Whitewashed II Report: The Opioid Crisis in Black Chicago

Whitewashed II examines overdose trends, response efforts, and the conditions shaping overdose vulnerability in Chicago and Cook County. The report documents the structural drivers of persistent racial disparity and offers concrete recommendations across four pillars: prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery, and policy and systems reform. The report was produced by the Chicago Urban League Research and Policy Center with analytic and subject-matter contributions from academic researchers and public health experts curated by the Institute for Racial Justice at Loyola University Chicago.

Black Student Success in Illinois

Developed in partnership with the Illinois Workforce Education Research Collaborative (IWERC), with support from The Joyce Foundation.

This project examines how Black student access and success across early childhood education, K–12, higher education, and the Illinois workforce have shifted over the past decade. Drawing on public data and modeled after the Latino College Landscape Study, the initiative brings together research, education, and policy stakeholders to identify persistent inequities, surface emerging trends, and inform more equitable pathways for Black student success across Illinois.

Excellerator Fund Evaluation Partnership

In partnership with the Excellerator Fund

We partnered with the Excellerator Fund to conduct a comprehensive, community-centered evaluation of the Fund’s design, implementation, and impact. Guided by principles of Participatory Action Research, IRJ worked closely with Latinos Progresando and the Greater Auburn Gresham Development Corporation throughout a 9 month evaluation process. Finalized in 2025, the evaluation serves as a case study in equitable, cross-community grantmaking and offers critical insights for funders, policymakers, and city leaders seeking to invest in Chicago’s Black and Mexican communities.

M2 Fellowship

The M2 Fellowship program establishes a community of support and skill development for underrepresented math teachers as culturally conscious instructional leaders.

The Chicago-Torino Lab (CTL)

We're collaborating with scholars, activists, and local leaders in Chicago and Torino, Italy to compare and contrast insights on the impacts of policies that have produced geospatial segregation of residents based on their race, ethnicity and/or country of origin.

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Institute of Education Sciences (IES) Gifted Education Policy Research Project

The research team is developing preliminary evidence of what types of gifted education policies work, for whom, and under what conditions. Researchers will also produce peer-reviewed publication(s). This is an IES-funded research project in collaboration with the Cook Center for Social Equity at Duke University.

Community Schools Initiative (CSI)

Community schools bring together educators, families, and community partners to meet students’ and families’ academic and non-academic needs, develop educated citizens, and strengthen local neighborhoods. IRJ is a partner for those local public school partners managed by Loyola University Chicago.

We Rise Together: For An Equitable & Just Recovery

We Rise Together: For An Equitable & Just Recovery (an initiative of The Chicago Community Trust) is an accelerator in the economic recovery to help ensure Black and Latinx communities hit hardest by the COVID-19 crisis are not left behind, supporting a stronger region for all. IRJ is partnering with Loyola's Center for Urban Research and Learning, Quinlan School of Business scholars and MAPSCorps, to conduct a comprehensive multi-year evaluation of this initiative.

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