UVA Batten Students Team Up with Alumnus at the World Bank

Two UVA Batten MPP students who are graduating this week had the opportunity to collaborate with alumnus Cameron Haddad (MPP '19) this semester on a project for the World Bank, providing them hands-on experience in policy work. As a student, Haddad worked on a World Bank project with professor Lucy Bassett, who connected the three in February.

Twice a year, the World Bank releases its Poverty & Equity Briefs (PEBs), which provide concise, country-specific updates on poverty and inequality trends across more than 120 nations. In February, Batten alumnus Cameron Haddad (MPP ’19), who now oversees the PEB series, was looking for consultants to support the editing process. Remembering how valuable hands-on experience had been during his own time as a student — particularly when working on a World Bank project with Lucy Bassett, professor of practice and co-director of Batten’s Humanitarian Collaborative — Haddad knew Batten students would be uniquely equipped for the task.

With support from Bassett, who had recently taught a course, “Child & Youth Policy,” exploring key frameworks for measuring poverty and inequality, Haddad recruited two MPP students, Mikayla Havison and Alvin Tran Nguyen, both of whom are graduating this week. 

“As an external reviewer for the World Bank’s Poverty & Equity Briefs, I was responsible for ensuring the accuracy, clarity, and consistency of 128 country summaries,” Nguyen said. “The experience gave me a window into how multilateral organizations translate complex data into accessible, policy-relevant content. It sharpened my technical editing skills and deepened my appreciation for the rigor required to present economic information meaningfully.” 

He added that learning how poverty manifests across countries “made multidimensional poverty much more tangible. It also showed me the limits of conventional poverty metrics in capturing the lived experiences of communities facing instability, environmental degradation, and social vulnerability.”

Havison also found her experience with the World Bank rewarding. “Editing reports for the World Bank gave me a unique opportunity to see my policy work make a real-world impact. I learned what it takes to translate research into a format that others can use as a foundation for change.”

here. Building on the success of this partnership, Bassett and Haddad are now exploring ways to formalize and continue the opportunity through the Humanitarian Collaborative student fellowship program in future years.

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