Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

Navigation

You are here: Home

Search results

477 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type









































New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Sangaramoorthy Op-Ed links racial and immigrant justice movements
Sought-for freedoms require action in both domains, she says
Located in News
Sangeetha Madhavan, African American Studies, Sociology, MPRC
Rural Connectivity, Kinship Support and Food Security in Kenya
Located in Coming Up
Sarah Halpern-Meekin, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Monthly unconditional income supplements starting at birth: Experiences among mothers of young children with low incomes in the US
Located in Coming Up
Article Reference Troff document (with manpage macros)School punishment and interpersonal exclusion: Rejection, withdrawal, and separation from friends
Abstract School suspension is a common form of punishment in the United States that is disproportionately concentrated among racial minority and disadvantaged youth. In labeling theories, the implication is that such stigmatized sanctions may lead to interpersonal exclusion from normative others and to greater involvement with antisocial peers. I test this implication in the context of rural schools by 1) examining the association between suspension and discontinuity in same-grade friendship ties, focusing on three mechanisms implied in labeling theories: rejection, withdrawal, and physical separation; 2) testing the association between suspension and increased involvement with antisocial peers; and 3) assessing whether these associations are stronger in smaller schools. Consistent with labeling theories, I find suspension associated with greater discontinuity in friendship ties, based on changes in the respondents’ friendship preferences and self-reports of their peers. My findings are also consistent with changes in perceptual measures of exclusion. Additionally, I find suspension associated with greater involvement with substance-using peers. Some but not all of these associations are stronger in smaller rural schools. Given the disproportionate distribution of suspension, my findings indicate that an excessive reliance on this exclusionary form of punishment may foster inequality among these youth.
Located in MPRC People / Wade C Jacobsen, Ph.D. / Wade Jacobsen Publications
School-based health centers reduce income-based health disparities
Boudreaux evaluates how the policy influences healthcare access outcomes in low-income families
Located in Research / Selected Research
File Troff document (with manpage macros)Self-rated Health and Structural Racism Indicated by County-level Racial Inequalities in Socioeconomic Status: The Role of Urbanization
Caryn N. Bell University of Maryland: Jessica L. Owens-Young American University: 2019-005
Located in Research / Working Papers / WP Documents
Seminar Series : Food Insecurity and SNAP Participation Among Immigrant Families During the Economic Downturn
Heather Koball, Senior Fellow, Labor, Human Services, and Population Center, Urban Institute
Located in Coming Up
Seminar Series: Adolescent Experiences and Adult Neighborhood Attainment
Kris Marsh, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Maryland
Located in Coming Up
Seminar Series: Ethnomedicine and Biomedicine in Rural Senegal: Rationality and Magical Thinking
Jack Sandberg, Associate Professor, Department of Global Health, George Washington University
Located in Coming Up
Seminar Series: Individual Behavior and Population Health Disparities: The Affordances Framework for Understanding Population Disparities in Physical and Mental Health
James S. Jackson, Professor of Psychology and Director of the Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan
Located in Coming Up