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CPC Frank H. T. Rhodes Annual Symposium and the Center for the Study of Inequality co-sponsors conference on immigration
The Criminalizing Immigrants: Border Controls, Enforcement, and Resistance conference will be held November 9-10 on Cornell's campus. The "criminalization" of immigration through more restrictive immigration policies and stricter enforcement of existing policies affects migrants and their families, communities, and labor markets in sending and receiving nations. The conference will examine the causes and consequences of the criminalization of immigration, drawing on empirical projects from around the globe. The conference is organized by CPC affiliates Filiz Garip (Sociology), Shannon Gleeson (School of Industrial & Labor Relations), and Matthew Hall (Policy Analysis and Management). See the program here.
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CPC Grant Development Program
Nicolas Ziebarth, Associate Professor of Policy Analysis and Management, was awarded a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation grant for his project, the Impact of U.S. Sick Pay Mandates on Sick Leave Coverage Rates, Non-Mandated Fringe Bene
fits, and the Spread of Diseases (with Catherine Maclean from Temple University).
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CPC Postdoctoral Fellowship
Call for Applications
CPC is accepting applications for the CPC Frank H.T. Rhodes Postdoctoral Fellowship to start August of 2018. This two-year program supports promising early career scholars in social demography through close collaboration with
CPC faculty affiliates
. For more information and to apply:
https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/10058
. Applications due December 8, 2017.
CPC Frank H.T. Rhodes Postdoctoral Fellow
Patrick Ishizuka
presented Motherhood Penalty in Context: Assessing Discrimination in Low- and High-Skilled Occupations. The study draws on Ishizuka's
original field experiment of more than 2,200 fictitious applications to actual job openings in 2 low-skilled and 2 high-skilled occupations, experimentally manipulating signals of motherhood status.
Mothers received fewer callbacks from employers than equally-qualified childless women in both low- and high-skilled jobs.
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Upcoming Seminars in the Innovations in Population Seminar Series
Tyson Brown (Assistant Professor of Sociology, Duke University) will present
Life Course Lens on Health Inequality: The Intersection of Race, Nativity a
nd Aging. Co-sponsored by ISS, CSI, Policy Analysis and Management (PAM), and the Institute on Health Economics, Health Behaviors and Disparities (HEHBAD).
November 17.
Bridget Goosby (Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln) will present
Discrimination, Dynamic Stress Processes, and Health Risk across the Life Course.
Co-sponsored by ISS, CSI, PAM, and HEHBAD. December 1.
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John Santelli, CPC Visiting Faculty (Fall 2017)
. Santelli (Professor of Population and Family Health and Pediatrics, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University) conducts policy-related research on HIV/STD risk behaviors, teen fertility, and research ethics. He recently received a 5-year NIH award
Structural and Social Transitions among Adolescents in Rakia to support his research on HIV risk in Uganda.
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Joanne S. Muller, CPC Visiting Ph.D. Student (Fall 2017)
. Muller is a Fulbright Fellow visiting from the Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute where she is doing her doctoral research in family demography and sociology.
Her research focuses on work-family decisions and the intergenerational transmission of socioeconomic advantage in comparative perspective.
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CPC Demography Training
Upcoming
CPC graduate training proseminars include
External Funding for Graduate Students with
Patrick Ishizuka (CPC Frank H.T. Rhodes Postdoctoral Fellow) and
Intro to Spatial Demography and Analytics with
Peter Rich (Assistant Professor of Policy Analysis and Management)
.
Xing Sherry Zhang (Ph.D. Candidate, Policy Analysis and Management) presented in PAM's seminar series on
Protective Contexts for Depressive Symptoms from Adolescence to Adulthood by Race and Ethnicity.
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Annual Upstate Population Workshop
The sixth Annual Upstate Population Workshop --- a joint initiative of CPC and Syracuse University's Center for Aging and Policy Studies --- was held in Syracuse on October 20. Forty faculty and students from Cornell University, Syracuse University, SUNY Buffalo, SUNY Albany, and the University of Rochester participated. The agenda included research from all upstate institutions, early results from the 2016-17 CPC-CAPS pilot projects, and thematic working groups.
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Peter Rich, Assistant Professor of Policy Analysis and Management and Sociology (by courtesy) presented,
Trajectories of Student Disadvantage: Unpacking Free/Reduced Price Lunch Eligibility across Childhood (with Katherine Michelmore from Syracuse University).
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Population Studies in Practice: The New York Minute
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Follow us on Twitter and keep us posted on any news you'd like to share at population@cornell.edu.
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Improving lives by exploring and shaping human connections to
natural, social, and built environments
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confirm the source before you click. Never give away your NetID password -- not in email, not on the phone, not in person.
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