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When and Where Does Achievement Inequality Grow? Ecology, the City and Social Disorganization
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Odis Johnson Jr., University of Maryland; 2014-007
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Research
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Working Papers
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WP Documents
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When and Where Does Achievement Inequality Grow? Ecology, the City and Social Disorganization
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Odis Johnson Jr., University of Maryland; 2012-012
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Research
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Working Papers
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WP Documents
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Who Experiences Leisure Deficits? Mothers' Marital Status and Leisure Time
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The authors used the 2003 to 2012 American Time Use Survey to examine marital status variation in mothers' leisure time. They found that never‐married mothers have more total leisure but less high‐quality leisure when compared with married mothers. Never‐married mothers' leisure is concentrated in passive and socially isolated activities that offer fewer social and health benefits. Black single mothers have the highest amount of socially isolated leisure, particularly watching television alone. Results suggest that differences in the context and type of leisure are salient dimensions of the divergent and stratified life conditions of married, divorced, and single mothers.
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MPRC People
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Liana C. Sayer, Ph.D.
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Liana Sayer Publications
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William Dow, University of California at Berkeley
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Female Sex Workers in the Time of COVID: Longitudinal Evidence from Tanzania
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Coming Up
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Women’s Sequencing of First Births Relative to First Substantial Employment Before and After the 1990’s Welfare Reforms
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Michael S. Rendall, University of Maryland and Rachel Shattuck, U.S. Census Bureau; 2016-002
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Research
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Working Papers
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WP Documents
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Work in the time of COVID-19: social norms and pluralistic ignorance
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Kreuter explores shifting attitudes surrounding work behaviors in employees and supervisors
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Research
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Selected Research
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Work mobility during COVID
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NSF Rapid Response project will examine job restructuring, policy effects
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Research
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Selected Research