Fall 2020 News & Events
Despite the unusual nature of current events, the importance of population science and the demographic approach could not be more clear. I am excited to be able to build off the enormous successes of CPC under Kelly Musick’s outstanding leadership, further enrich the community of population research, and expand into new and innovative areas of research, teaching, and engaged outreach. We have an exciting Fall 2020 planned and look forward to reconnecting with students, faculty, postdocs, faculty, researchers and visitors from across campus – and with all the CPC activities now held online – nationally and internationally. Best wishes for a great start to the 2020-21 academic year. Matt Hall, CPC Director
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Welcome Reception: September 10, 4:30-5:15 pm
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Upcoming Seminars and Events
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CPC hosts the Innovations in Population Science seminar series with co-sponsorship from the Cornell Center for Social Sciences (CCSS) and CSI. Talks are Fridays, 12-1:15pm virtually. Ariela Schachter (Washington University in St. Louis) will kick off the series with her talk titled, Ancestry, Color, or Culture? How Whites Racially Classify Others in the U.S.. October 2, 12-1:15pm.
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National Institute on Aging (NIA) Multi-University Aging and Policy Center
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Syracuse, Cornell, and SUNY at Albany received a 5-year, $1.5-million grant from the National Institute on Aging (NIA) to fund the Center for Aging and Policy Studies (CAPS), headquartered at Syracuse University. Cornell’s team, led by Kelly Musick (PAM) includes Erin York Cornwell (SOC), Rachel Dunifon (PAM), Maria Fitzpatrick (PAM), Dan Lichter (PAM), Corinna Loeckenhoff (Weill Cornell, HD), Anthony Ong (HD), Karl Pillemer (PAM), Adriana Reyes (PAM), and Seth Sanders (ILR). The center will bring together 41 scholars from across the three sites whose research focuses on the demography and economics of aging, organized by the themes of health and well-being and family and intergenerational supports. It will fund innovative pilot projects and will offer a colloquia series, visiting scholars program, grant mentoring program, state-of-the-art methods training, and a research incubator to foster collaborations among CAPS affiliates.
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COVID-19 Affiliate Research and Outreach
Qi Wang (HD) was awarded a grant from the Cornell Atkinson Center to study social distancing during COVID-19 and its relation to psychological well-being.
Erin York Cornwell (SOC), Kate Cagney (Chicago), and Christopher Browning (Ohio State University) received an NSF rapid response grant for their work, How has COVID-19 Affected the Daily Mobility Patterns and Health Outcomes of Urban Older Adults?.
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Welcome CPC Affiliates and Members
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Max Kapustin (PAM) studies ways to reduce violence in urban settings and improve the life outcomes of disadvantaged youth and adults.
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Philipp Kircher (ILR) focuses on labor markets, in particular regarding wage setting and assignment of workers to jobs. Kircher has also worked on epidemics and how individuals change their behavior in response to diseases and policies.
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Barum Park (SOC) studies political sociology, social networks, and social mobility with a focus on how several social dimensions intersect to create social structures we care about.
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Landon Schnabel (SOC) focuses his research on gender inequality alongside other dimensions of social inequality including sexual orientation, race, ethnicity, and class.
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Chiara Galli (Ph.D., Sociology, UCLA) is a Klarman Postdoctoral Fellow. Galli conducts research on humanitarian paths to legal status in the U.S. immigration process. She is writing a book examining the experiences of Central American unaccompanied minors who apply for asylum in the U.S., focused on the mismatches between youths’ lived experiences of escape from violence and the narrow formal criteria of U.S. asylum case law.
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Chris Hess (Ph.D., Sociology, University of Washington) is PAM's newest postdoctoral fellow. Hess's interests focus on residential segregation, housing markets and the changing spatial distribution of place-based inequalities.
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Linda Zhao (Ph.D., Sociology, and M.A. Statistics, Harvard) is CPC's newest Frank H. T. Rhodes Postdoctoral Fellow. Zhao conducts research on how network structures influence the integration of immigrant youth and predict social processes that shape police misconduct and crime.
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CPC Demography Training Updates
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DemSemX was launched this summer to promote cross-center graduate training and scholarly interaction. Events were held in May and again in late August, with 9 U.S. population centers participating: Bowling Green, Brown, Cornell, Michigan, Minnesota, Penn State, UCLA, UT-Austin, and UW-Madison. The events brought together a total of 375 participants from across the U.S. in a plenary session and break-out rooms featuring graduate student presenters and faculty discussants. Look out for our Fall programming!
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CPC's graduate training proseminar kicked off the semester with a focus on preparing abstracts for PAA 2021. Next up is an overview of resources available through the Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research with additional topics spanning the areas of professional development, traditional demography, methods, computing, and data. Predocs and postdocs welcome.
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Graduate Student Spotlight
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Tatiana Padilla (Ph.D., PAM, expected May 2023): A SUNY Graduate Diversity scholar, member of the PAM Diversity and Inclusion working group; and serves the Latinx graduate community as an executive board member of the Latinx Graduate Student Coalition. Padilla uses quantitative and qualitative approaches to promote a bi-national understanding of the consequences of U.S. immigration policy and explores the intersectionality of migration experiences and status.
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Undergraduate Student Spotlight
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Jada Kissi (B.A., CALS, expected 2021) is minoring in demography. Kissi is passionate about working in development, specifically addressing the needs of populations that are overlooked on a national or global scale. She has recently studied abroad in Switzerland and met with the World Trade Organization and the OECD. Kissi participated in UT Austin’s Population Research Center REU where she conducted her own research project to investigate the effects of Ghanaian women’s sexual empowerment on the correlation between education and family planning. She plans to attend graduate school.
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CPC Demography Minors & Postdocs on the Job Market
Karina Acosta Ordonez, Ph.D., City and Regional Planning (expected 2021); Regional Economic Development, Spatial Econometrics, and Demography
Etienne Breton, Ph.D., Demography (Princeton University, 2019); PAM Visiting Fellow; Families, Living arrangements, Gender, Inequality, Mixed-methods Research
Jocelyn Fischer, Ph.D., Sociology (expected 2021); Gender, Family, Work and the Labor Market, inequality and Social Stratification
Sarah James, Ph.D., Sociology and Social Policy (Princeton University, 2019); CPC Frank H. T. Rhodes Postdoctoral Fellow: Child and Adolescent Wellbeing; Family and Community Factors in Health Disparities; Sleep
Sneha Kumar, Ph.D., Development Sociology (expected 2021); Aging and Health, Labor Migration, Gender, Family Demography, International Development, Social Protection.
Emily Parker, Ph.D., Policy Analysis and Management (expected 2021); Health and Social Policy, Poverty and Inequality, Gender and Family, Spatial Demography
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Call for Applications
Coming soon—look out for PAM's call for applications for an open-rank faculty position in Race and Public Policy.
The Klarman Postdoctoral Fellowship at Cornell is accepting applications from broad areas of research (applications due October 15). CPC encourages applications from scholars working in social demography.
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Shannon Gleeson (ILR) with Sofya Aptekar wrote the op-ed, All Undocumented Immigrants Deserve Citizenship—Not Just “Essential Workers” for In These Times.
Emily Parker (Ph.D. Candidate in PAM), Sharon Sassler (PAM), and Laura Tach (PAM) paper, Fatherhood and Racial-Ethnic Differences in the Progression of Romantic Relationships was accepted in the Journal of Family and Marriage.
Elaine Wethington (HD) is Co-PI and Ithaca Site Leader for Disparities in the Diffusion of Direct-acting Antiviral Therapy for Hepatitis C among Baby Boomers: A Mixed-Methods Study, funded by the National Institute on Diabetes & Digestive & Kidney Disorders.
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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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