Boustan has published three books, many academic papers, and has released a handful of working papers since 2007. These works have made considerable contributions to the fields of economic history,
labor economics, and
urban economics. In her book
Competition in the Promised Land: Black Migrants in Northern Cities and Labor Markets (Princeton University Press, 2016) Boustan explores the migration of almost four million black individuals from the American South to urban centers in the North. In opposition to prior thought, that the
Great Migration was a catalyst for black economic progress, Boustan argued that the migration restricted the convergence of black and white wages in northern cities and contributed to "
white flight". In this book Boustan utilizes an innovative analysis of
U.S. census data. She concludes that the migration had detrimental effects on urban areas in the north, leading to the suburbanization of whites and limited black economic progress. In her prior book,
Human Capital in History, Boustan intersects important research in labor economics, history, education, and other similar fields, providing new insights into the forces that drive the accumulation of
human capital. Boustan's more recent writings deal with the migration from Europe to the United States in the 1800s, including her third book, co-authored with Ran Abramitzky, ''Streets of Gold: America's Untold Story of Immigrant Success''. In it, Boustan and Abramitzky use data analysis techniques on large datasets to argue that children of immigrants from nearly every country, especially those of poor immigrants, demonstrate rapid assimilation and upward mobility, doing better economically than children of U.S.-born residents. They also argue that immigrants improve the economy and help the US-born, staving off negative consequences of an aging population. She has published other papers on urbanization in the United States, segregation in American cities, income inequality, and other related topics. == Economics work ==