Research in Financial Planning, Housing and Consumer Economics
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Kristy Archuleta
Professor, Betsy Barnard Sages Professorship in Financial therapy and Financial Planning
Dr. Archuleta has an established international reputation in the area of financial therapy. This area integrates psychological, relational, and financial factors affecting individual, couple, and family well-being.
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Mary Bell Carlson
Adjunct Faculty
My research centers around financial behavior, financial counseling, coaching, and therapy.
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Andy Carswell
Professor
Dr. Carswell’s work covers a variety of housing-related topics, but he is particularly known for mortgage fraud and property management research.
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Swarn Chatterjee
Department Head and Bluerock Professor of Financial Planning
My research focuses on three primary areas: Performance evaluation across different stages of the financial planning process; Examination of the association between financial well-being, welfare dependency, and health among underserved populations; and Identification of factors that improve financial decision making among transitioning young adults and the elderly households.
My current research in progress includes: Measuring the value of financial advice across the different stages of the financial planning process; examining factors that are associated with greater financial resiliency among households recovering from an adverse financial event; and determining the association between household financial decision making and their food insecurity as well as food purchase behavior.
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Sam Cupples
Lecturer
My research focuses on the impact of Behavioral Finance on decision making processes in the area of Personal Financial Planning.
My current research includes two areas: (a) the association of personality on personal financial decision making, and (b) the association of financial risk tolerance on personal finanical decision making.
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Jermaine Durham
Assistant Professor of Housing and Community Development
My research concentrates on analyzing socioeconomic inequality in American society, with a particular emphasis on housing policy and the built environment as analytical lenses. Housing, as a component of the built environment, serves as a medium that reflects, perpetuates, and reinforces systemic inequalities based on class, race, gender, and space in the United States. I aim to investigate the role of the built environment, specifically housing, as a mechanism in perpetuating socioeconomic disparities. Furthermore, I explore avenues through which community organizing and development can empower disadvantaged communities to improve local housing and neighborhood conditions.
As the Director of the Georgia Initiative for Community Housing and Associate Director of the Center for Housing and Community Research, I integrate academic expertise with public service and outreach. My scholarship includes practical guides and journal articles addressing critical community issues. Through extensive outreach and engagement, my goal is to support local leaders and stakeholders as they work to advance their communities towards improved living conditions, enhanced quality of life, and heightened economic vitality.
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Heidi Ewen
Adjunct Faculty
My combined research and teaching agenda reflects a commitment to the biopsychosocial aspects of aging, stress & adaptation, housing, and relocation decision-making. I frame my teaching and research primarily from an interdisciplinary perspective largely built upon social psychology experimental paradigms. The majority of my scholarly work is on aging and environment, particularly aging-in-place and relocation decision-making, stress, and adaptation among older adults using a mixed methods research designs. I have analyzed data with basic univariate statistics, advanced multivariate statistics, and case study approaches.
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Lu Fan
Associate Professor
My research interests include financial advice-seeking behavior, consumer well-being, financial socialization, financial education, literacy, and capability, and behavioral finance.
- Financial socialization and financial behavior and well-being of adults at different life stages
- Financial decision-making and behavioral finance
- The mechanism of financial well-being
- Young adults' financial capability, independence and life outcomes
- Cognitive abilities, psychological characteristics, and financial planning practices
- Financial worries and hardship and health outcomes
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Megan Ford
Clinical Assistant Professor & Love and Money Center Director
- interdisciplinary training & experiential learning
- financial therapy
- couples and money conflict
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Joseph Goetz
Professor
- Implications of the fiduciary standard on the investment advice process
- Investment risk tolerance and risk perception factors in portfolio optimization
- Effectiveness of financial readiness and education programming for US Air Force
- Effectiveness of theoretically-based financial planning intervention models
- Implications of the fiduciary standard on the investment advice process
- Investment risk tolerance and risk perception factors in portfolio optimization
- Effectiveness of financial readiness and education programming for US Air Force
- Effectiveness of theoretically-based financial planning intervention models
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John Grable
Athletic Association Endowed Professor of Family and Consumer Sciences
My research interests include financial risk-tolerance assessment, behavioral financial planning, and financial decision making. My work tends to be applied and focused on helping consumers and financial service professionals navigate the increasingly complex financial marketplace. Working with colleagues in my Financial Planning Performance Lab, I am actively engaged in conducting evidence-based research.
My students and I are currently working on projects related to financial risk tolerance assessment. A separate line of research involves the clinical evaluation of financial planning practice standards and models.
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Stephen Kuzniak
Part-Time Lecturer
My research focuses on Behavioral Economics, Risk Tolerance and Assessment, Financial Therapy, Financial Decision Making, and Popular Consumer Finance.
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Diann Moorman
Associate Professor
- Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
- Bankruptcy
- Low-income households
- Single-parent households
- Teenage-mother households
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Lance Palmer
Professor
Dr. Palmer's research seeks to identify effective ways of motivating financial behavior change through brief intervention strategies. He is currently focused on developing brief interventions that are informative, scalable, and can easily be integrated into the income tax preparation process. The design and format of the brief interventions are informed by research findings from behavioral economics and behavior change theory, as well as evidenced-based counseling practices such as Solutions-Focused Brief Coaching.
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Narang Park
Lecturer
My research interest includes financial literacy, psychological disposition, and behavioral changes that positively affect one’s financial well-being.
- Financial Well-being
- Financial Stress and Alternativ Financial Service Use
- Mortgage Status and Financial Stress
- Payday Loan Use
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Yilang Peng
Assistant Professor
My scholarship is at the intersection of computational social science, visual communication, and media effects. My research applies cutting-edge computer vision methods to investigate the production and effects of visual media, an increasingly prevalent component of today’s digital media environment. My works have been published in leading venues both in communication and human-computer interaction, including the Journal of Communication, Communication Research, New Media & Society, the International Journal of Press/Politics, the International Journal of Communication, Public Understanding of Science, and the Proceedings of ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems.
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Ron Sages
Adjunct Professor
I aspire to bring applied research to financial planning practitioners in an effort to provide practical solutions to client-focused challenges.
I currently am focusing on Applied Behavioral Finance research surrounding the discipline of estate planning, incorporating behavioral factors associated with probate litigation within traditional and blended families.
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Jerry Shannon
Associate Professor
I'm a geographer studying how to make urban neighborhoods and food systems healthier and more equitable. My broad interests are in urban development and inequality, geographic information systems, political geography, and place effects on health. More specifically, my research focuses on the role of maps in shaping our understanding of hunger, housing, poverty, and neighborhood development.
I am an assistant professor in the Department of Geography and the Department of Financial Planning, Housing, and Consumer Economics at the University of Georgia. I also direct the Community Mapping Lab in the Department of Geography and am an assistant director of the Housing and Demographics Research Center on campus.
You can find more information on my specific research projects on my research page. Among other things, I am currently aiding in a participatory planning process with the Atlanta Community Food Bank, studying the local effects of changes to SNAP (food stamps) in Georgia during the Great Recession, doing participatory mapping of the housing landscape in several Georgia cities, and developing a data dashboard for open data here in Athens-Clarke County. I am currently seeking graduate students interested in open data, participatory research, data visualization, and community development. -
Kimberly Skobba
Josiah Meigs Distinguished Professor
My research focuses on two distinct areas 1) the housing needs of low-income households and 2) the relationship between community development and social capital in rural and small towns. Through the use of a qualitative, biographical method, I study the connection between housing pathways and life circumstances of low-income households. My research on housing instability among low-income households has advanced the understanding of the different strategies that families use to maintain shelter and the ways in which personal characteristics and life course events affect their ability to find and maintain housing. My second area of research examines the housing and community development experiences and the role of social capital in community development capacity of rural and small towns. My research in this area uses surveys, qualitative data collection and case studies to better understand the housing and community development challenges and potential solutions facing rural and small town communities in the Southeastern region of the United States.
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Aman Sunder
Part-Time Lecturer
Gender and ethnic diversity in the Financial Planning profession and academia.
Financial help-seeking behavior during the Great Recession.
ESG/ SRI investments.
Work-life balance and burnout among women in the financial planning profession.
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Michael Thomas
Lecturer
My research interest involve the follwoing:
-Social captial's impact on financial well-being.
-Understanding how empathy and compassion play a role in financial well-being
-Unpacking data visualizations impact on financial choice
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Pamela Turner
Professor and Extension Housing & Indoor Environment Specialist
My research focuses on linkages between health and housing, the importance of creating safe and healthy living environments, and radon.
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Dee Warmath
Associate Professor and Leadership Fellow for Innovation and Entrepreneurship
My research examines the ways in which a consumer’s approach to decision making promotes the well-being outcomes of those decisions. I focus on the roles of decision-making skill, self-efficacy, motivation, and the involvement of others in achieving well-being.
I served for more than five years as the Principal Investigator for the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection on its project to define and measure financial well-being, as well as test hypotheses of its drivers. I was also a Principal Investigator in the NCAA / Department of Defense Mind Matters Challenge with a three-year project examining the role of design thinking and social marketing in encouraging concussion reporting among young adults. I am currently working with Dr. Brenda Cude on a study of collegiate financial education and with the Australian Securities and Investment Commission on a study financial vulnerability and well-being. My research has been published in a variety of journals including the Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Consumer Affairs, British Journal of Sports Medicine, Journal of Business Research, Sports Health, and Journal of Public Policy & Marketing, and presented at a variety of international and national conferences including the National Athletic Training Association, Frontiers in Service, Association for Consumer Research, American Council of Consumer Interests, and CFP Academic Research Colloquium. I am also a fellow of the Center for Financial Security at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Tammy Williams
Lecturer
- Financial Education
- Financial Literacy
- FAFSA Completion
- Overcoming Financial Obstacles