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The Displaced New Orleans Residents Study
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MPRC Director Michael Rendall is working with Faculty Associate Paul Torrens, Geography, to analyze social, economic, and health outcomes for New Orleanians
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Families and Inequality
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Faculty Associate Philip Cohen brings sociology research to the public eye by tackling thorny issues about race, gender, family, and inequality in an online public forum.
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More Young Adults Are Financially Dependent on Parents Than 50 Years Ago
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Demography article by Kahn, Goldscheider, and Garcia-Manglano examines changing family residence patterns
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Race, Gender, and Obesity: How the Social Environment Constrains or Enables Physical Activity
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Faculty associate Rashawn Ray investigates the social and environmental changes needed in order to remove neighborhood barriers to regular physical exercise
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Affordable Care for All?
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Faculty associate Jerome Dugan investigates the relationship between socioeconomic status, health insurance coverage, and affordable quality care
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Race, Gender, and Educational Achievement
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Odis Johnson investigates how social issues affect education
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Developing Nations: "Our Pollution is Your Consumption"
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MPRC Faculty Associate Klaus Hubacek demonstrates how material consumption in rich countries is fueled by pollution and environmental destruction in the developing world
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Gneisha Dinwiddie Investigates Links Between Race, Lifelong Stress, and Cardiovascular Disease
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Ongoing social and economic stress leads to racial and ethnic disparities in cardiovascular disease outcomes
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How does interview methodology affect interviewer variance?
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Frauke Kreuter compares the effectiveness of commonly-used face-to-face interview methods
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The Healthy Generations Program: Improving Access to Mental Health Care
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New model of integrated service delivery makes mental health services more accessible to teenaged parents
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