- Authors Dr. J. Cedric Woods, Dr. Allison Taylor, and Dr. Phillip Granberry presenting their 2025 report: To Live and Thrive in Massachusetts: Native American Perspectives on Wealth
- Wednesday, November 5th, 2025. 12pm - 1:00pm
- In-person and Virtual event. No registration required.
- State Library of Massachusetts - Room 341, Massachusetts State House
- Livestream on YouTube
- Full Report available online!
The State Library of Massachusetts Author Talks Series is hosting authors of the 2025 report, To Live and Thrive in Massachusetts: Native American Perspectives on Wealth. Please keep reading for details on the event and authors.
This is an in-person and virtual event. The livestream available on our YouTube channel courtesy of the Massachusetts House of Representatives Broadcast Services. Tune in at noon!
Be sure to sign up for our Author Talks newsletter and follow our social media channels (Instagram, Facebook, and X) for the latest information on our visiting authors. If you are unable to attend, the recording will be posted to our YouTube channel to watch anytime - view all past recordings here!
About the report: Published in January 2025 in partnership with Boston Indicators and UMass Boston's Institute for New England Native American Studies (INENAS), To Live and Thrive in Massachusetts is a unique report that compiles both qualitative and quantitative data to look at the wealth disparities of Native American communities and families living in Massachusetts. The report is organized into three parts; historical overview and context at both the state and federal policy level, quantitative analysis of Massachusetts Native American communities with data on income, homeownership, business ownership, population, etc. and finally qualitative research which brings in findings from focus groups with interviews of local MA Native American families.
Authors
Dr. J. Cedric Woods is the Director of the Institute for New England Native American Studies at UMass Boston. Please read below for information on Dr. Woods from the UMass Boston INENAS site:
Cedric Woods is a citizen of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina. He combines over a decade of tribal government experience with a research background, and has served as the director of INENAS since 2009.
The institute's purpose is to connect Native New England with university research, innovation, and education. Currently, Cedric is working on projects with tribes in the areas of tribal government capacity building, Indian education, economic development, and chronic disease prevention.
Prior to arriving at UMass Boston, Cedric completed a study on the evolution of tribal government among the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe and the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation. While pursuing his doctoral studies at the University of Connecticut, he served in a variety of capacities for the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation. These positions included director of career development, research analyst, tribal government spokesman, and deputy chief operating officer.
Cedric has served as a consultant for the National Museum of the American Indian, the Haliwa Saponi Indian Tribe of North Carolina, and the Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of Plimoth Plantation, a bicultural living history museum in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Dr. Allison Taylor is a Senior Research Associate at the Institute for Community Inclusion (ICI) at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Dr. Taylor specializes in qualitative and community-based research and evaluation, with a focus on how the voices of people with lived experience can help improve employment services and systems. Dr. Taylor is the principal investigator (PI) for the Lawrence Partnership for Transition to Employment (LPTE) and the recently awarded Rapid Engagement Team Approach (RETA) Project, and leads a community-based participatory research study for the Native Equity in Employment and Recovery (NEER) project. She earned an MSW from Boston University and a PhD in sociocultural anthropology from Brandeis University.
Dr. Phillip Granberry is a Senior Lecturer in Economics and Data Analyst for the Gastón Institute at UMass Boston. Dr. Granberry’s area of expertise includes Social Capital, International Migration, and Urban Economics. Granberry holds a PhD, Public Policy, from University of Massachusetts Boston. For more information on Dr. Granberry visit the Gastón Institute site which includes a list of his publications and professional biography which is also below:
Phillip Granberry is a social demographer who specializes in unauthorized immigration in the United States. He worked with various community-based organizations assisting recently arrived U.S. immigrants before earning a PhD in public policy from the University of Massachusetts Boston. He has published several articles on the accumulation and use of social capital among Mexican migrants and the impact of welfare and immigration policy reform on Latinos in Massachusetts. He teaches courses on international migration, labor market, and metropolitan areas. In addition to his teaching in the Economics Department, he is a senior research associate for the Gastón Institute, where he is using his survey research skills to develop a probabilistic household survey of Puerto Rican mothers in Springfield, MA. In this research, he is an investigator for Por Ahí Dicen, a research project of the Center for Health Equity Intervention Research (CHEIR). Por Ahí Dicen evaluates the effectiveness of media campaign to promote Spanish-speaking Puerto Rican mother-child communication about sexuality and sexual health.
As always, this author talk is free and open to all. Assisted listening devices will be made available upon request. If you are able to join us in person for this talk, attendees will be able to participate in a question-and-answer session with the authors.
Any questions or concerns, please email us at AuthorTalks.StateLibrary@mass.gov. For more information on the State Library Author Talks series, please visit our site.
April Pascucci
On behalf of Author Talks Working Group
As always, this author talk is free and open to all. Assisted listening devices will be made available upon request. If you are able to join us in person for this talk, attendees will be able to participate in a question-and-answer session with the authors.
Any questions or concerns, please email us at AuthorTalks.StateLibrary@mass.gov. For more information on the State Library Author Talks series, please visit our site.
April Pascucci
On behalf of Author Talks Working Group




