Daniel Brent
· Associate ProfessorVerifiedPennsylvania State University · Learning Sciences and Technologies
Active 2013–2025
About
Daniel Brent is an Associate Professor at the Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology, and Education at Pennsylvania State University. His role involves developing the next generation of leaders and bringing usable, science-based information to the public. His research focus is not explicitly detailed on the page, but his position within the department suggests a specialization in agricultural economics, rural sociology, or related fields. As an associate professor, he contributes to both teaching and research activities, supporting the department's mission to foster a welcoming community of learners engaged in community development, environmental issues, and food systems.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Economics
- Business
- Political Science
- Microeconomics
- Geography
- Engineering
- Environmental science
- Ecology
- Marketing
- Environmental resource management
- Agricultural economics
- Social psychology
- Psychology
- Transport engineering
- Environmental economics
- Agricultural science
Selected publications
Causal effects of urbanization and winter weather on salinity in the Delaware River Basin
Journal of Environmental Management · 2025-07-19 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessSalinity is increasing in freshwater reaches of rivers around the globe, including in the Delaware River Basin, located in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States. This study estimates the causal effect of land use changes on in-stream salinity concentrations in the Delaware River Basin. A 1% increase in urbanized areas increases salinity by 3 mg/L, or about 16%. Freezing precipitation, which leads to salt from deicing applications, also increases salinity, particularly in watersheds with developed land uses. Simulating salinity levels based on land use and climate projections indicates that, even in a warming climate with reduced deicing, more development increases in-stream salinity. • Urbanization significantly increases in-stream salinity levels. • A 1% increase in developed land raises salinity by 3 mg/L (16%). • Freezing rain events elevate salinity due to road deicer runoff. • Future projections show salinity increases despite climate warming. • Findings inform land use and climate policy for water quality resilience.
Enhancing Equity and Sustainability in Utility Assistance Programs
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2025-11-06
datasetSenior authorEnhancing Equity and Sustainability in Utility Assistance Programs
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2025-11-06
datasetSenior authorSSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingCausal Effects of Urbanization and Winter Weather on Salinity in the Delaware River Basin
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen accessPeer Effects in Voluntary Environmental Policies: An Application to Urban Water Quality
Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists · 2025-10-14
article1st authorCorrespondingThe distributional impact of FEMA’s community rating system
Agricultural and Resource Economics Review · 2024-01-03 · 4 citations
articleOpen access1st authorAbstract Community Rating System (CRS) incentivizes investments in risk reduction above NFIP standards using discounts on insurance premiums. These discounts are cross-subsidized by increasing premiums in non-CRS communities. We examine the distribution of these subsidies and find that redistribution does occur, but the gains and losses are not economically large with 95% of households gaining or losing no more than 0.3% of household income. We also examine their relationship with other community characteristics and find that the strongest predictor of premium reductions is the underlying flood risk level within the community. Thus, CRS appears to reduce the cost of living in the riskier communities.
Water International · 2024-05-24 · 6 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCarbon emission-led climate change affects food security. Although irrigation builds climate resilience and supports the stability of the water–energy–food (WEF) nexus, irrigation access and reliability are constrained by energy access, whereas increasing energy demand exacerbates carbon emissions. This feedback demonstrates the need to include carbon in the nexus, leading to a WEF–carbon (WEFC) nexus. Solar irrigation can be a four-way win, as it contributes to positive water, energy and food interactions without increasing carbon emissions. This paper empirically assesses farmer-owned solar irrigation in Gujarat, India, and identifies mechanisms for mainstreaming solar irrigation and stakeholders’ roles in the WEFC nexus.
The effect of financial education in college
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2023-02-17
dataset1st authorCorrespondingThe effect of financial education in college
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2023-02-17
dataset1st authorCorresponding
Frequent coauthors
- 13 shared
Anke Leroux
- 13 shared
Lata Gangadharan
- 10 shared
Marie Claire Villeval
Groupe d'Analyse et de Théorie Economique Lyon St Etienne
- 8 shared
Zack Dorner
Lincoln University
- 8 shared
Allison Lassiter
University of Pennsylvania
- 7 shared
Joseph Cook
- 6 shared
Paul A. Raschky
- 5 shared
Anca Mihut
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1
Education
- 2013
PhD, Economics
University of Washington
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