2006 Notestein Seminars
- Discrimination in Low Wage Labor Markets.
February 7, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Devah Pager, Sociology, Princeton University
- Dignifying Discontent: Informal Workers' Organizations and the State of India.
February 14, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Rina Agarwala, OPR, Princeton University
- Nonparametric Estimation of Disability-Free Life Expectancy Using Period Life Table and Cross-Sectional Disability Survey.
February 21, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Samir Soneji, OPR, Princeton University
- Excess Weight and Health: A Longitudinal Analysis by Sex and Race.
February 28, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Anna Zajacova, OPR, Princeton University
- The Killing Fields Revisited: Lynching and Anti-Miscegenation Legislation in the Jim Crow South, 1882-1930.
March 7, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Scott Leon Washington, OPR, Princeton University
- The "European Social Model" and the USA.
March 14, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Jens Alber, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin fur Sozialforschung
- What Drives Inequality of Educational Opportunity? A Test of Stratification Theory from a Latin American Perspective.
March 28, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Florencia Torche, Columbia University
- What Occupational Segregation by Race, Sex, and Ethnic Ancestry Can Teach Us About Racial Classification.
April 4, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Barbara Reskin, University of Washington
- An Empirical Analysis of Acting White.
April 11, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Roland Fryer, Harvard University
- Deepening Pluralism: Building Solidarity to Eliminate Racial Health Inequality.
April 18, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Arline Geronimus, University of Michigan
- Spending More and Getting Less: Social Determinants and Disparities in Health as the Key to Understanding and Resolving America's Paradoxical Crisis of Health, Aging, and Health Care.
April 25, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Jim House, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS), Stanford University
- What Gives When Mothers Are Employed? Parental Time Allocation in Dual Earner and Single Earner Two-Parent Families.
May 2, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Suzanne Bianchi, University of Maryland
- The Aging Mind.
September 19, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Denise Park, The University of Illinois, Beckman Institute
- The American Welfare State: Laggard or Leader?
September 26, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Irwin Garfinkel, School of Social Work, Columbia University
- Parallel Pathways: Gender Similarity in the Impact of Social Support on Adolescent Depression and Delinquency.
October 3, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Sarah Meadows, CRCW, Princeton University
- Stature and Status: Height, Ability, and Labor Market Outcomes.
October 11, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Anne Case and Chris Paxson, CHW, Princeton University
Joint with the Center for Health and Wellbeing.
- Internationalizing International Migration Policy.
October 17, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Paul Demeny, Population Council
- Why Do We Age So Differently?
October 24, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Kaare Christensen, University of Southern Denmark
- Neighborhood Social Ecology and Adolescent Well-Being.
November 7, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Chris Browning, The Ohio State University
- New Evidence on the Effects of Maternal Work Hours on Low-Income Adolescent's Development.
November 14, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Lisa Gennetian, MDRC
- Do You Like Me as Much as I Like You? Friendship Reciprocity and Its Effects on School Outcomes among Adolescents.
November 21, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Grace Kao, Asian American Studies Program, University of Pennsylvania
- Dynamics of Childhood Poverty: A Latent Class Trajectory Approach.
November 28, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Mary Clare Lennon, Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy, Columbia University
- Heterosexual Cohabitation in the United States: Motives for Living Together among Young Men and Women.
December 5, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Pam Smock, Population Studies Center, University of Michigan
- Racial and Ethnic Variation in Marital Disruption in the United States.
December 12, 2006 @ Noon - 300 Wallace Hall
Megan Sweeney, UCLA