Better Government Lab in Print

Our Publications

Jae Yeon Kim, Pamela Herd, Sebastian Jilke, Donald Moynihan, Kerry Rodden. 2024. Administrative Checkpoints, Burdens, and Human-Centered Design: Increasing Interview Access to Raise SNAP Participation. Better Government Lab Working Paper.

Moynihan, Donald. 2024. The New Progressives? The Emergence of Civic Tech in the United States and its Implications for Governing. Better Government Lab Working Paper.

Pamela Herd and Donald Moynihan. How Administrative Burdens Can Affect Health, October 2nd, 2020 Health Affairs. 

Olsen, Asmus Leth, Jonas Høgh Jeppesen, and Donald P. Moynihan. “The Unequal Distribution of Opportunity: A National Audit Study of Bureaucratic Discrimination in Primary School Access.” American Journal of Political Science.

Christensen, Julian and Donald P. Moynihan. “Motivated Reasoning and Policy Information: Politicians are More Resistant to Debiasing Interventions than the General Public.” Behavioral Public Policy.

Baekgaard, Martin, Mette Kjærgaard Thomsen and Donald P. Moynihan. 2020. “Why Do Policymakers Support Administrative Burdens? The Roles of Deservingness, Political Ideology and Personal Experience.” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory

Herd, Pamela and Donald Moynihan. 2020. “Administrative Burdens in the Time of COVID-19.” Focus

Christensen, Julian, Lene Arøe, Martin Baekgaard, Pamela Herd and Donald P. Moynihan. 2020. “Human Capital and Administrative Burden: The Role of Cognitive Resources in Citizen-State Interactions.” Public Administration Review 

Herd, Pamela and Donald Moynihan. 2018. Administrative Burden: Policymaking by Other MeansNew York: Russell Sage Foundation.

Bhargava, S., & Manoli, D. (2015). Psychological frictions and the incomplete take-up of social benefits: Evidence from an IRS field experiment. American Economic Review, 105(11), 3489-3529.

Guyton, J., Langetieg, P., Manoli, D., Payne, M., Schafer, B., & Sebastiani, M. (2017). Reminders and recidivism: using administrative data to characterize nonfilers and conduct EITC outreach. American Economic Review, 107(5), 471-75.

In the News

Interviews

Lawmakers Consider 2 Plans For Monthly Payments To Address Child PovertyNational Public Radio February 19, 2021

The Race to Dismantle Trump’s Immigration PoliciesThe New Yorker, February 1, 2021

What the New Federal Eviction Moratorium MeansBloomberg, September 2 2020

Are You Eligible for Food Stamps Now? Maybe, but It’s ComplexThe New York Times, July 17, 2020

The Safety Net Got a Quick Patch. What Happens After the Coronavirus? The New York Times, March 31, 2020

Medical Bills are their Own TraumaThe Nation, March 20, 2020

The Trump administration plans to kick 700,000 off food stamps during a pandemicVox, March 20, 2020

Q&A: Sometimes Bureaucracy Is Intentionally Complex The American Prospect, February 19, 2019

The Weeds Podcast: Policy by Other Means The Weeds/Vox, February 13, 2019

 

Media Coverage

What Democrats can learn from Mitt Romney Vox, Feb 23, 2021

America’s vaccine distribution needs a shot in the ar‪m‬, The Weeds, January 5 2021

Take the Quiz: Could You Manage as a Poor American?The New York Times, January 28, 2020

 

Video Interviews

Administrative Burden: Keynote, University College Dublin

Administrative Burden, Discussion, Blavatnik School, University of Oxford

Death by a Thousand Paper Cuts: Curbing Immigration with Administrative Burdens