Dona Schneider
Papers
3
Total Citations
20
H-Index
2
About
Dona Schneider is a multidisciplinary researcher whose work spans environmental health policy, public health systems, and the emerging intersection of technology and labor. Her scholarship has made meaningful contributions to understanding how governance structures shape human health outcomes, particularly within the complexities of the U.S. federal system. Schneider's most recognized contributions include her influential examination of how American federalism manages environmental health hazards. Her book *Environmental Health and the U.S. Federal System: Sustainably Managing Health Hazards* (2019) offers a compelling framework for understanding human health risk within a federalist context, tracing how policy has evolved in response to pressing environmental challenges. This work has garnered significant attention from scholars and practitioners navigating the often fragmented landscape of environmental regulation and public health protection. Beyond environmental policy, Schneider has also turned her attention to the rapidly transforming world of work, exploring how robotics and artificial intelligence are reshaping labor markets and human futures — a timely contribution that reflects her broad intellectual range. With her most cited works all published in 2019, Schneider represents a researcher at a productive and engaged stage of her career, offering students and fellow scholars a thoughtful, policy-grounded perspective on some of today's most pressing public health and societal challenges.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
- 1Robots, artificial intelligence, and the future of work10 citations · 2019
- 2Environmental Health and the U.S. Federal System8 citations · 2019
- 3