Browsing Faculty of Arts and Sciences by FAS Department "Social Policy"
Now showing items 1-9 of 9
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Criminal Justice, Self-Sufficiency, and the Life Course: Social and Economic Insecurity After Incarceration and Conviction
(2018-05-11)This dissertation examines previously unexplored aspects of the socioeconomic wellbeing of individuals who have passed through the American criminal justice system, expanding upon prior work both substantively and temporally. ... -
Essays Exploring Urban Violence
(2016-08-18)Despite continued interest in understanding the problem of urban violence in the United States, fundamental scholarly and policy-relevant questions remain regarding the nature of urban violence, its consequences, and the ... -
Essays on Schools, Crime, and Punishment
(2015-05-19)This dissertation consists of three essays on schools, crime, and punishment. The first essay — stemming from collaborative work with Christopher Jencks, Anthony Braga, and David Deming — uses longitudinal school and ... -
Experiences of Doubling-Up Among American Families With Children
(2018-07-17)Facing rising rents and economic insecurity, many American families live “doubled-up” in extended households. Households are considered doubled-up if they contain any adults besides the householder and her romantic partner. ... -
Gentrification, Race, and Immigration in the Changing American City
(2015-08-19)This dissertation examines how gentrification—a class transformation—unfolds along racial and ethnic lines. Using a new conceptual framework, considering the city-level context of immigration and residential segregation, ... -
(Hiding) in Plain Sight: How Class Matters Differently Among Low-Income Students in Suburban Schools
(2016-05-18)U.S. suburbia is rapidly changing, becoming home to increasing numbers of poor families and immigrants. However, traditionally disadvantaged students who attend well-resourced middle-class suburban schools have been largely ... -
Paying Taxes: Understanding Americans’ Tax Attitudes
(2015-05-12)This dissertation examines American attitudes about taxation. Surveys and interviews shed new light on how Americans think about four fundamental questions: Should one pay taxes, and if so, how much? Who pays their fair ... -
Start, Start Again: The College Pathways of Economically-Vulnerable Mothers
(2015-05-15)How do returning college students navigate the rapidly diversifying landscape of higher education options available to them today? Adopting a life course perspective, I argue that the college persistence of non-traditional ... -
Whose Bills? Corporate Interests and Conservative Mobilization Across the U.S. States, 1973-2013
(2016-05-14)In recent decades, conservative groups have become increasingly active in mobilizing corporations to press their interests not just on the U.S. Congress and federal agencies, but also on legislatures in the fifty U.S. ...