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Abraham and Kearney examine secular decline in US employment over the past two decades
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Robots and offshoring seen as important factors in decline of employment rates
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Research
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Selected Research
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Das Gupta contributes to Azerbaijan "National Action Plan" to ensure gender equality
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Solving skewed sex ratio ameliorates social tensions, may bring economic benefits
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News
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Might the gender revolution strengthen the family?
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MPRC Special Symposium
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Research
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Seminar Series
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Seminar documents and flyers
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Dawn Marie Dow Releases "Mothering While Black"
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Boundaries and burdens of middle-class black parenthood
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News
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Methodological Issues in Maternal Mortality Research
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NICHD R21 project seeks to clarify maternal mortality records
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Research
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Selected Research
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Journal Club Meeting with Typhanye Dyer
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Examining Psychosocial and Behavioral Correlates of STI and HIV Risk among Men who have Sex with Men (MSM) and Men who have Sex with Men and Women (MSMW)
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Coming Up
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Family diversity key to understanding marriage trends
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Marketwatch article reports changes in single motherhood since 1992
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News
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Hofferth on housework disproportion
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Gender disparities start at home
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News
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Early Home Experiences of Young Latino Boys
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Why research on low-income Latino children really matters
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Research
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Selected Research
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Punishment and Inequality at an Early Age: Exclusionary Discipline in Elementary School
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We advance current knowledge of school punishment by examining (1) the prevalence of exclusionary discipline in elementary school, (2) racial disparities in exclusionary discipline in elementary school, and (3) the association between exclusionary discipline and aggressive behavior in elementary school. Using child and parent reports from the Fragile Families Study, we estimate that more than one in ten children born between 1998 and 2000 in large US cities were suspended or expelled by age nine, when most were in third grade. We also find extreme racial disparity; about 40 percent of non-Hispanic black boys were suspended or expelled, compared to 8 percent of non-Hispanic white or other-race boys. Disparities are largely due to differences in children’s school and home environments rather than to behavior problems. Next, consistent with social stress and strain theories, we find suspension or expulsion associated with increased aggressive behavior in elementary school. This association does not vary by race but is robust to a rich set of covariates, within-individual fixed effects, and matching methods. In conjunction with what we find for racial disparities, our results imply that school discipline policies relying heavily on exclusionary punishment may be fostering childhood inequality.
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MPRC People
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Wade C Jacobsen, Ph.D.
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Wade Jacobsen Publications