Kayla D. Allison Source Confirmed
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Assistant Professor
University of Arkansas at Fayetteville
faculty
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Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Kayla D. Allison's research investigates the intersections of societal structures, health outcomes, and public policy. Her work examines the lasting impacts of historical inequities, such as slavery, on health disparities within African American communities in the Deep South, particularly concerning HIV/AIDS. Allison also studies the relationship between punishment within educational systems and long-term self-rated health, extending from adolescence into midlife.
Further research areas include the analysis of violence, with a focus on gender dynamics in mass shootings, and the examination of police responses to individuals experiencing homelessness. She has also contributed to the development of open-source data approaches for studying bias-motivated homicides. Allison's scholarship is marked by an h-index of 7 and 172 citations across 15 publications. Key collaborators at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville include Michael Niño, Grant Drawve, and Alexia Angton.
Metrics
- h-index: 7
- Publications: 15
- Citations: 172
Selected Publications
- An Open-Source Data Approach to Studying Bias Murder: An Introduction to the Bias Homicide Database (BHDB) (2026) DOI
- Intersections of crime and health: structural inequalities, spatial dynamics, and policy (2025) DOI
- Police Responses to People Experiencing Homelessness (2024) DOI
- The Long Arm of School Punishment: The Role of School Suspension on Self-Rated Health from Adolescence to Midlife (2024) DOI
- Strained Masculinity and Mass Shootings: Toward A Theoretically Integrated Approach to Assessing the Gender Gap in Mass Violence (2022) DOI
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