-
Seminar Series: Odis Johnson, Associate Professor, African American Studies
-
Great Equalizers or Conduits of Inequality? A Counterfactual Analysis of Year-Round and 9-Month Schooling within Neighborhood Contexts
Located in
Coming Up
-
Seminar Series: Robert Moffitt, Professor of Economics, Johns Hopkins University
-
The Deserving Poor and the U.S. Welfare System
Located in
Coming Up
-
Measuring Children’s Living Arrangements in Rural South Africa: A Comparison of Approaches and Application to Schooling Outcomes
-
Sangeetha Madhavan and Tyler Myroniuk, University of Maryland; Randall Kuhn, University of Denver; Casey Blalock, University of Colorado Boulder; Mark Collinson, University of Witwatersrand; 2014-002
Located in
Research
/
Working Papers
/
WP Documents
-
Director Michael S. Rendall speaks to Yale Demography Workshop
-
Contributes to Distinguished Speaker Series, 2013-14
Located in
Coming Up
-
Rashawn Ray debates Bloomberg's health policies in the New York Times
-
NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg: Health policy innovator, or intrusive "Manny"?
Located in
News
-
Cutting Funding for Food Stamps is "Economically and Morally Unsound"
-
Washington Post Op-Ed piece makes case for retaining food stamp support
Located in
News
-
Seminar Series: Michael Bader, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, American University
-
Timing, Pace, and Location of Neighborhood Racial and Ethnic Change in Large Metropolises from 1970 to 2010
Located in
Coming Up
-
Perverse Reverse Price Competition: Average Wholesale Prices and Medicaid Pharmaceutical Spending
-
Judith Hellerstein, University of Maryland; Mark Duggan, University of Pennsylvania; Abby Alpert, University of California Irvine; 2013-021
Located in
Research
/
Working Papers
/
WP Documents
-
How Firms Respond to Business Cycles: The Role of Firm Age and Firm Size
-
John Haltiwanger, University of Maryland, et al.; 2013-020
Located in
Research
/
Working Papers
/
WP Documents
-
Gneisha Dinwiddie Investigates Links Between Race, Lifelong Stress, and Cardiovascular Disease
-
Ongoing social and economic stress leads to racial and ethnic disparities in cardiovascular disease outcomes
Located in
Research
/
Selected Research