Winter 2020 News & Events
As we wind down the year, we'd like to share some fall highlights, upcoming events, affiliate news, an alumni spotlight, and training updates. I am optimistic about our future and look forward to reconnecting next semester. Best wishes for a wonderful and restful winter break. Matt Hall, CPC Director
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Fall Highlights and Spring Events
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CPC Seminar Series
Highlights from the fall and co-sponsored talks include Stéphane Helleringer (New York University, Abu Dhabi), "Preventing the Spread of SARS-CoV-2 in Malawi: Initial Results from a Panel Study"; Daniel Schneider (Harvard Kennedy School), "Essential and Unprotected? Service Sector Work in a time of COVID19", and Elizabeth Wrigley-Field (University of Minnesota), "The Black Deaths America Treats as Normal". Recordings from CPC hosted talks and can be viewed online.
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Visit the Cornell Population Center
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Affiliates in the Racism in America Webinar Series
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Center for Aging and Policy Studies (CAPS)
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COVID-19 Affiliate Research and Outreach
Nicolas Bottan (PAM) with Bridget Hoffmann and Diego Vera-Cossio published, "The unequal impact of the coronavirus pandemic: Evidence from seventeen developing countries" in Plos One.
Matt Hall (PAM) discussed populations in NYS with underlying health conditions and rates of COVID-19 infection in the article, "Cornell Researchers Predicted Virus Stronghold On Upstate Counties With Vulnerable Populations" at WICZ.
Erin McCauley (Ph.D. Candidate in SOC) with Katherine Lemasters, Kathryn Nowotny, and Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein published the article, "COVID-19 cases and testing in 53 prison systems" in Health and Justice.
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Grant Development Program
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Demography Graduate Student Proseminar
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Research Funds for Graduate Students
To encourage academic and professional growth, CPC launched a Rapid Response Grant Program to fund graduate student research. All CPC graduate student affiliates are eligible, with strong priority given to demography minors. Projects must focus on demographic topics. In the first two rounds, CPC training co-directors, Vida Maralani (SOC) and Doug Miller (PAM) awarded grants to Alexandra Cooperstock (Ph.D., SOC, expected ‘22), Erin McCauley (Ph.D., SOC, expected ‘22), Yoselinda Mendoza (Ph. D., SOC, expected ‘22), Giulia Olivero (Ph.D., PAM, expected ‘23), Katharine Sadowski (Ph.D., PAM, expected ‘24), Juhwan Seo (Ph.D., SOC, expected ‘25), and Li Zhu (Ph.D., PAM, expected ‘22).
Social Sciences Postdoctoral Fellows Working Group
The final postdoc working group of the semester focused on research by Gaoxia Zhu (Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow in Human Development) titled, "Profiling Youth and Examining Their Motivation in A Self-Driving Learning Project". The working group meets monthly and is cosponsored by CPC, the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research, CCSS, and CSI.
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Faculty Affiliate Spotlight
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Welcome New Affiliate
Duanyi Yang (ILR School, Department of Labor Relations, Law, and History) studies labor relations, gender, work and family policies, worker voice and unions. Yang's research investigates how organizational human resource management policies operate within different institutional contexts and in the face of globalization, migration, and demographic shifts.
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CPC Alumni Recognition
Fenaba Addo (Ph.D., PAM '12, CPC Graduate Research Assistant '11, Associate Professor, UW-Madison) is an economic demographer whose research examines the role of economic resources in the family, relationships, and on wellbeing. Her recent work explores racial disparities in student-loan debt and its relationship to wealth inequality within communities of color and among economically vulnerable populations. Addo believes that policy matters for addressing inequality within our society and shares that her interdisciplinary training at Cornell taught her to ask policy-relevant questions that have led her to where she is today. Addo appreciates her many mentors, including Sharon Sassler (PAM), and Dan Lichter (PAM) who positively impacted her while at Cornell and continue to, today. Addo will begin the next phase of her academic career in January 2021 as an Associate Professor of Public Policy at UNC-Chapel Hill and a Carolina Population Center affiliate.
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Graduate Student Spotlight
Emily Parker (Ph.D. Candidate, PAM, expected May '21) is broadly interested in health and social policy, poverty and inequality, as well as gender and family. Her dissertation uses in-depth interviews, spatial demographic methods, and archival research to study access to health care for low-income Americans, and recently received APPAM's Best Comparative Policy Paper award. Congratulations Emily!
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Undergraduate Student Spotlight
Julia Eddelbuettel (B.A., PAM, expected '22) is a demography minor and interested in public economics, public health, and social policy, with a specific focus on women’s reproductive rights policy. She is a research assistant and lab manager in Rosemary Avery's (PAM) Pharmaceutical Advertising Databases Lab. Eddelbuettel's honor’s thesis is an analysis of state-level policy hostility toward abortion rights and women’s contraceptive use and unintended pregnancy rates.
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Affiliate Research and Awards
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Chris Barrett (AEM) recently published the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability/Nature Sustainability report, "Socio-Technical Innovation Bundles for Agri-Food Systems" on the Nature Sustainability website, in collaboration with its sibling journal, Nature Food.
Erin McCauley (Ph.D. Candidate in SOC) received a Fahs-Beck Doctoral Dissertation Grant funded by The New York Community Trust for Dissertation and Faculty Research in the Human Services for her dissertation project, "Detained Potential: Associative Stigma as a Core Mechanism Behind Educational Inequality for Children of Incarcerated Mothers."
Victor Nee (SOC) with Lucas Drouhot (Ph.D., '18 and Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity) published “Immigration, Opportunity and Assimilation in a Technology Economy,” in Theory and Society.
Adriana Reyes (PAM) has been selected as a USC Alzheimer’s Disease Resource Center for Minority Aging Research scholar to advance her research on how different state policies affect family caregiving strategies for adults with cognitive decline. Read more in the USC Health Policy news.
Sharon Sassler (PAM) has been elected to the Population Association of America Nominations Committee and serves as committee chair.
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Population Studies in Practice: The New York Minute
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Improving lives by exploring and shaping human connections to
natural, social, and built environments
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CORNELL LINK SAFETY TIP: In many email programs and browsers, hovering over a link *without* clicking lets you see the real destination for the link, often displayed in the bottom corner. You can trust links where cornell.edu appears right before the FIRST slash (/). Check all others closely, and 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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