Callie’s research examines segregation in activity spaces and neighborhood dynamics, with a focus on how access to public infrastructure shapes the diversity of social interactions. She has an ongoing project evaluating Emergency Food Access in New York City using a multi-dimensional framework in collaboration with partners at City Harvest and the University of Colorado Boulder.

Callie earned an M.S. in Systems Engineering and a B.S. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from UC Berkeley. Prior to graduate school, she worked as a data analyst at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the Building Technology and Urban Systems Division.

Keywords: activity spaces, spatial segregation, neighborhood dynamics, public infrastructure, urban mobility, accessibility, social interaction, food systems, spatial data science, complex systems

Contact

Please feel free to reach out with questions or to discuss my work.

Email: callieclark@nyu.edu
LinkedIn: linkedin.com