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FAMDEM: Family Analysts Meeting to Discuss Emerging Manuscripts

FAMDEM, originated in Fall 2008, is a friendly, informal group for students, faculty, and postdocs to present early results from (and get feedback on) their research on Family Demography. Families are central to many social processes at the macro and micro levels. Marriage and childcare continue to be highly gendered, with implications for stratification in the workplace. Changes in work and social policy over the past century have had profound implications for social expectations about marriage, fertility, and intergenerational relationships. Families continue to link the opportunities of children to those of their parents and thus families are still central to (re)production of the next generation. These are some of the topics of research FAMDEM members discuss at meetings.

We meet from 2:30-3:30 Wednesday, every other week, in CLA 1.302C

Upcoming presentations

September 20. Ken-Hou Lin

October 18. Abigail Weitzman. "Disentangling the Relationship between Intimate Partner Violence and Infant and Child Mortality." 

November 1. Shannon Cavanagh. “Instability Sequences and Maternal Health”

November 15. Alex Weinreb and Jenna Johnson-Hanks. European Fertility.

November 29. Robert Ressler. TBA      

Recent presentations

August 9, Shih-Yi Chao and Kelly Raley "Cohort change in the socioeconomic predictors of divorce, a couple-level analysis."

July 26, Beth Cozzolino "Flat Broke without Children: Policing Nonresident Parents in Child Support Court."

June 28, Sarah Brayne “Technologies of Crime Prediction: Comparing the Use of Big Data Analytics in Policing and Courts.” 

March 29: Rachel Donnelly, Debra Umberson, and Tetyana Pudrovska. "Race Differences in Family Death Exposures and Subjective Life Expectancy."

 April 5: Inbar Weiss, "Marriage to recent arrival immigrants and importation of spouses as ethnic preservation practices."

March 22: Liz Ackert, “Extended households, pre-K enrollment, and school readiness”

March 8: Diane Coffee and Dean Spears, “Neonatal mortality sharply decreases in birth order in India”

March 1: Shannon Cavanagh, Chelsea Smith Gonzalez, Rachel Behler, Beth Cozzolino and Robert Ressler, “Young Adults’ Union Formation Sequences and the Great Recession”

February 15: Kate Prickett, "The End of Intensive Motherhood? The Changing Role of Education and Work in TIme Focused on Children from 2003-2015." Discussants: Beth Cozzolino and Katie Paschall.

November 16: Beth Cozzolino, "Jail for Child Support Debt in Fragile Families." (Rob Crosnoe and Julie Skalamera Olson discussants).

October 26: Rachel Behler, "The Social Embeddedness of Sexual Networks"

October 12: Ken-Hou Lin, "Growing Part: The Changing Firm-Size Wage Premium and its Inequality Consequences" (Jennifer Glass and Aida Villanueva discussants)

August 31: Liz Ackert (w/ Robert Ressler, Arya Ansari, and Robert Crosnoe), "Family Necessity, Community Needs, and the Selection of Children from Mexican Immigrant Families into Early Childhood Care and Education" (Shannon Cavanagh and Inbar Weiss discussants)

July 13: Inbar Weiss and Kevin Dahaghi “Indebted, Unmarried, but Educated: Difference in Marriage Patterns among U.S Young Adult” (Haley Stritzel and Ken-Hou Lin discussants)

 May 4:  Aida Villanueva (w/ Ken-Hou Lin), “Motherhood Wage Penalties and the Informal Sector in Latin America”

 April 20:  Liz Ackert, "Kin Location and Disparities in Residential Mobility and Neighborhood Attainment"

 April 6: Shannon Cavanagh, (w/ Kate Prickett, and Julie Skalamera), “Instability and Mental Health”

Members

Liz Ackert, Postdoc 
M. Carolina Aragao, Graduate Student
Shannon Cavanagh, Professor
Shih-Yi Chao, Graduate Student
Robert Crosnoe, Professor
Diane Coffey, Professor (on leave)
Elizabeth Cozzolino, Graduate Student
Rachel Donnelly, Graduate Student
Jennifer Glass, Professor
Ken-Hou Lin, Professor  
Kelly Raley, Professor
Robert Ressler, Graduate Student
Haley Stritzel, Graduate Student
Aida Villanueva, Graduate Student
Alex Weinreb, Professor
Inbar Weiss, Graduate Student

Select Publications

Cobb, J. Adam and Ken-Hou Lin. “Growing Apart: The Declining Firm-Size Wage Effect and Its Wage Inequality Consequence.” Organization Science

Ansari, Arya. Forthcoming. "The persistence of preschool effects from early childhood through adolescence." Child Development

Olson, Julie Skalamera and Robert Crosnoe. 2017. “Are You Still Bringing Me Down? Romantic Involvement and Depressive Symptoms from Adolescence to Young Adulthood.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior .

Kuo, Janet Chen-Lan and R. Kelly Raley. 2016. “Is it All about Money? Work Characteristics and Women’s and Men’s Marriage Formation in Early Adulthood.” Journal of Family Issues. 37:1046-1073 DOI: 10.1177/0192513X14530973

Kim, Yujin and R. Kelly Raley. 2015. “Race-Ethnic Differences in the Non-marital Fertility Rates in 2006–2010. Population Research and Policy Review. 34(1): 141-159. DOI: 10.1007/s11113-014-9342-9

Augustine, Jennifer March and R. Kelly Raley. April 2013. “Multigenerational Households and the School Readiness of Children Born to Unmarried Mothers.” Journal of Family Issues 34(4): 431-459. DOI: 10.1177/0192513X12439177

Raley, R. Kelly, Kim, Yujin, and Kimberly Daniels. 2012. “Young adults' fertility expectations and events, Associations with college enrollment and persistence.” Journal of Marriage and Family. 74: 866-879. DOI: 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2012.00990.x

McNamee, Catherine M. and R. Kelly Raley. 2011. “A Note on Race, Ethnicity and Nativity Differentials in Remarriage in the United States.” Demographic Research. DOI: 10.4054/DemRes.2011.24.13

Uecker, Jeremy E and Mark D. Regnerus. 2010. Bare Market: Campus Sex Ratios, Romantic Relationships, and Sexual Behavior. The Sociological Quarterly 51: 408-435

Past Participants

Jennifer Augustine, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of South Carolina
Rachel Behler, Facebook
Kimberly Daniels, Associate Service Fellow at National Center for Health Statistics
Michelle Frisco, Associate Professor of Sociology and Demography, Penn State University
Conrad Hackett, Demographer, Pew Research Center
Pina Holway, Assistant Professor University of Texas San Antonio
Sarah Kendig, Assistant Professor Arkansas State University
Yujin Kim, Population and Society Studies Center, Dongguk University.
Rhiannon Kroeger, Assistant Professor Louisiana State University
Janet Kuo, Assistant Professor National Taiwan University
David McClendon, Research Associate Pew Research
Cate McNamee, Lecturer (tenure track) Queen’s University Belfast
Julie Skalamera Olson, Postdoctoral Fellow, University of North Carolina
Nina Palmo
, Lecturer University of Texas
David Pedulla, Assistant Professor,  Stanford University
Kate Prickett, Postdoctoral Fellow, Harris School of Public Policy, University of Chicago
Goleen Samari, Assistant Research Professor, UCSF, Reproductive Sciences
Chuck Stokes, Assistant Professor, Samford University
Ellyn Arevalo Steidl, Indeed
Kate Sullivan, Senior Researcher, American Institutes for Research
Jeremy Uecker Assistant Professor Baylor University
Jenjira Yahirun Assistant Researcher University of Hawaii

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