Welcome Back Fall 2019 News & Events
We have an exciting lineup planned for the upcoming year and look forward to reconnecting with students, postdocs, faculty, and visitors from across campus. Best wishes for a great start to the 2019-20 academic year—a
nd see you soon!
Kelly Musick
, CPC Director
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Welcome Reception: September 5, 3:30-5pm, CHE Commons
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Upcoming Seminars and Events
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Differential Privacy in the 2020 US Census
with
John Abowd
(US Census Bureau and Cornell),
Andrew Beveridge
, (Queens College, CUNY),
Abraham Flaxman
(University of Washington),
Shannon Monnat
(Syracuse University), and moderated by
Matthew Hall
(PAM). Co-sponsored by Policy Analysis and Management (PAM).
September 20, 12-1:30pm in Mann 102.
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CPC hosts the
Innovations in Population Science
seminar series with co-sponsorship from the Cornell Center for Social Sciences (CCSS), CSI, and the Office of the Vice Provost for Research (OVPR).
Talks are Fridays, 12-1:15pm in Mann 102. On October 4,
Carmen Gutierrez
(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) will present
Health Care Beyond the Gates: The Affordable Care Act’s Effects on Health-related Outcomes Among Recently Incarcerated Men
.
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New Affiliates and Members
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Seth Sanders
(Economics) joins us from the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. His research focuses on four lines of study: the trends of race and gender in relation to earnings among the highly educated; the effects of extreme economic changes on workers and families; the performance of gay and lesbian families within the economy; and the economic consequences of teenage childbearing.
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Sarah James
(Ph.D., Sociology and Social Policy, Princeton) is CPC's newest
Frank H. T. Rhodes Postdoctoral Fellow
. Her research examines disparities in health behaviors and their implications for broader patterns of inequality with the ultimate goal of identifying opportunities for interventions that enhance health and reduce inequality.
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CPC Demography Training Updates
CPC was awarded funding to support training in professional and leadership development from the College of Human Ecology's
Amy Jupiter '80 and Donald Motschwiller '80
Dean's Discretionary Fund for the Leadership Initiative & the
Deborah Gerard Adelman '71, MS '74
Dean's Discretionary Fund
.
CPC's first
demography training session
will focus on preparing abstracts for PAA 2020. Predocs and postdocs welcome.
Friday, August 30, 12-1:15pm in Mann 102 (lunch will be served)
.
See the full training schedule here
.
All postdocs in the social sciences are invited to participate in monthly meetings of the
Postdoctoral Social Scientists' Working Group
, co-sponsored by CPC, the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research (BCTR), CCSS, and CSI. The welcome reception will be held on
Thursday,
August 29, 5-6:30pm
at Ithaca Beer Company
.
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Postdoctoral Fellow Spotlight
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Hope Harvey
(Ph.D., Sociology and Social Policy, Harvard)
addresses questions related to poverty, families, housing and neighborhoods, and access to social programs.
Forever Homes and Temporary Stops: Housing Search Logics and Residential Selection
(with Kelley Fong, Kathryn Edin, and Stefanie DeLuca) was just published in
Social Forces
.
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Graduate Student Spotlight
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Emily Parker
(Ph.D., PAM, expected May 2021) was selected as a
2019 Fahs-Beck Scholar
to support her research
Health Without Wealth: The Historical, Social, and Spatial Context of the Community Health Center Program
.
Parker uses a mixed-methods approach that draws on historical, administrative, and archival data, as well as in-depth interviews with patients and providers.
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Undergraduate Student Spotlight
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Keith Acosta
is a senior pre-medical student in Global & Public Health Sciences with a minor in Demography. He has been working with the Seguin Research Group since the spring of his sophomore year and hopes to pursue a medical career in primary care focusing on diverse populations.
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CPC Demography Minors & Postdocs on the Job Market
Jocelyn Fischer
, Ph.D., Sociology (expected 2020);
gender, family, work and the labor market, and social stratification.
Alyssa Goldman
, Ph.D., Sociology (expected 2020); sociology of health, social networks, aging, and social stratification.
Hope Harvey
, Ph.D., Sociology and Social Policy (Harvard University, 2018); PAM Postdoctoral Fellow; doubled-up households, poverty and inequality, family complexity, residential decision-making.
Youngmin Yi
,
Ph.D., Sociology (expected 2020); family, children, policy, inequality
.
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Steven Alvarado
(SOC) has new work,
The Indelible Weight of Place: Childhood Neighborhood Disadvantage, Timing of Exposure, and Obesity Across Adulthood
, just published
in
Health & Place
.
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Don Kenkel
(PAM) was named Chief Economist of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, specializing in health economics and cost-benefit analysis. Read more in
The Wall Street Journal
.
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Karl Pillemer
(CHE Associate Dean, HD, Weill Cornell) and his team on the WHO study,
Interventions to Reduce Ageism Against Older Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
,
have shown for the first time that it is possible to reduce ageist attitudes, prejudices and stereotypes.
Read more in the
Cornell Chronicle
,
NY Times
, and
Science Daily
.
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Lindy Williams
(DSOC) has new work,
How Statelessness, Citizenship, and Out-migration Contribute to Stratification among Rural Elderly in the Highlands of Thailand
with Amanda Flaim and Daniel Ahlquist, forthcoming in
Social Forces.
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Katherine Wen
(Ph.D. Candidate in PAM) received NIH funding
to study the effects of policies for
Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs on Adverse-Opioid Related Emergency Department Visits and Inpatient Hospitalizations
.
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Population Studies in Practice: The New York Minute
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The New York Minute is published every other month and highlights NYS trends and data sources on varying community development topics. Read the most recent edition,
How do NYers Travel to Work? Differences by Age
by Jan Vink and Robin Blakely-Armitage.
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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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