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X-WR-CALNAME:California Center for Population Research
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for California Center for Population Research
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230405T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230405T130000
DTSTAMP:20260504T205303
CREATED:20220728T225505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230404T061352Z
UID:10000651-1680696000-1680699600@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:PAA Student Practice Talks
DESCRIPTION:Who Is Having the Second Baby? Educational Assortative Mating and Transition to the Second Child in China  \n\nIris Zhao\, Acton Jiashi Feng (equal authorship) \nAbstract: China continues to experience low fertility despite the lifting of the one-child policy. Most explanations focus on limited resources and ignore the role of educational assortative mating and couple dynamics. We use five waves of Chinese Family Panel Study (CFPS) data to address the link between educational pairing and second childbirths. We hypothesize that (1) hypergamous couples are more likely to have a second child than hypogamous and homogamous couples\, (2) among homogamous couples\, a U-shape for the likelihood of second childbirth exists along levels of education: highly educated and lower educated couples have higher likelihoods of transitioning to the second child than couples with medium education level. \nAssimilating or Diverging? Generational Differences in Time Use of Asian American and Hispanic Immigrant Youth \nKristin Liao\, Department of Sociology\, University of California\, Los Angeles \nAbstract: Sociologists studying international migration have rarely examined how immigrants allocate their time to daily activities. Yet\, immigrants’ time use can be seen as a measure of assimilation. Using data from the 2003-2019 American Time Use Survey\, this study explores how foreign-born\, second-generation\, and third-plus-generation Asian American and Hispanic youth differ in the patterns of daily time use relative to their third-plus generation White peers. I find patterns of generational convergence and ethnoracial divergence. Foreign-born and second-generation immigrant youth invest substantially more time in education than third-plus-generation White youth\, while no significant differences were found among third-plus-generation immigrant youth. Asian American youth show steep changes across immigrant generations in their time use pattern which increasingly resembles that of third-plus generation Whites\, whereas time use among Hispanic youth neither varies much across immigrant generations nor increasingly resembles the pattern of native Whites.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/paa-student-practice-talks/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/JEiBvJva_400x400-400x321-1.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230412T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230415T170000
DTSTAMP:20260504T205303
CREATED:20230329T152035Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230410T184609Z
UID:10000670-1681286400-1681578000@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:2023 PAA Conference
DESCRIPTION:CCPR at PAA 2023 Conference schedule may be accessed here.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/2023-paa-conference/
CATEGORIES:CCPR Conference,CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Fo-Hp1hWAAMOW9O.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230419T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230419T133000
DTSTAMP:20260504T205303
CREATED:20220728T225733Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230503T214421Z
UID:10000792-1681905600-1681911000@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Workshop: Preproducibility: what we may not\, with advantage\, omit
DESCRIPTION:Workshop: Preproducibility: what we may not\, with advantage\, omit \nPlease note that there will be no remote attendance for this event. All attendees must attend the workshop in person.  \nPanelists: Philip B. Stark (Remote)\, Yotam Shem-Tov\, Irene Bloemraad (Remote)\, and Randall Kuhn \nModerator: Patrick Heuveline \nPresenter:  \nPhilip B. Stark is Distinguished Professor of Statistics at the University of California\, Berkeley. He holds an AB in Philosophy from Princeton University and a PhD in Earth Sciences from the University of California\, San Diego. His research interests include philosophy of science and foundations of probability and statistics\, active transportation\, cosmology\, elections\, earthquakes\, gender bias\, lottery fraud\, nonparametric statistics\, physics\, regenerative agriculture\, simulation\, uncertainty quantification\, and wild food in urban ecosystems. Methods he invented for auditing elections are in law in about ten states. He has served as an expert witness or consultant for many Fortune 500 companies; the U.S. departments of Agriculture\, Commerce\, Housing and Urban Development\, Justice\, and Veterans Affairs; and numerous state agencies. He currently serves on the Board of Advisors of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. \nWorkshop: Preproducibility: what we may not\, with advantage\, omit \nWorkshop Description: Karl Popper (1992) wrote: “Science may be described as the art of systematic oversimplification — the art of discerning what we may with advantage omit.” Communicating a scientific result requires enumerating\, recording and reporting those things that cannot with advantage be omitted. At the dawn of the Enlightenment\, chemist Robert Boyle (1660) wrote The New Experiments so “that the person I addressed them to might\, without mistake\, and with as little trouble as possible\, be able to repeat such unusual experiments.” An experiment or analysis is preproducibleif it has been described in adequate detail for others to repeat it. Most current published science is not preproducible. We need to fix that. \nModerator:  \nPatrick Heuveline is a Professor of Sociology at UCLA. He is also the Associate Director of the UCLA California Center for Population Research. \nPanelists: \nYotam Shem-Tov is an Assistant Professor of Economics at UCLA. His research primarily focuses on Labor and Public Economics with a special interest in the U.S. criminal justice system. He received a BA in Economics and Philosophy from Tel-Aviv University and a PhD in Economics from UC Berkeley. \nIrene Bloemraad (Remote) (Ph.D. Harvard; M.A. McGill) is the Class of 1951 Professor of Sociology. She also serves as the Thomas Garden Barnes Chair of Canadian Studies at Berkeley\, is the founding Director of the Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative\, and co-directs the Boundaries\, Membership and Belonging program of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.In 2014-15\, she was a member of the U.S. National Academies of Sciences committee reporting on the integration of immigrants into American society. \nRandall Kuhn  is a demographer and sociologist focused on the social determinants of health among vulnerable populations. He is an expert in survey design\, longitudinal analysis and counterfactual research design. In the field of migration and health\, Kuhn has designed new approaches to estimating the impact of migration on health. In global health\, Kuhn leads a 35-year longitudinal study of the impact of health and development programs in Bangladesh. In the area of homelessness\, Kuhn conducted some of the earliest quantitative research on health and substance use risks among chronically homeless adults. He co-authored recent reports on homelessness and the coronavirus outbreak for the National Alliance to End Homelessness and on health and homelessness in Los Angeles. \n 
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/reproducible_research/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar,CCPR Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/JEiBvJva_400x400-400x321-1.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230426T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230426T132000
DTSTAMP:20260504T205303
CREATED:20220808T001949Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250118T000234Z
UID:10000800-1682510400-1682515200@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Marcella Alsan\, Harvard University
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Marcella Alsan is a Professor of Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School. Alsan received a BA from Harvard University\, a master’s in public health from Harvard School of Public Health\, a MD from Loyola University\, and a PhD in Economics from Harvard University. Alsan trained at Brigham and Women’s Hospital Hiatt Global Health Equity Residency Fellowship – then combined the PhD with an Infectious Disease Fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital. Prior to returning to Harvard she was on faculty at Stanford. She is an applied microeconomist studying health inequality. \n“Something Works: Misconduct and Recidivism Effects of the IGNITE Program” \nAbstract: US incarceration policy is often influenced by the longstanding view that “nothing works” when it comes to rehabilitating inmates. We revisit this question with a novel quasi-experimental approach and estimate the misconduct and recidivism effects of IGNITE: an innovative inmate education program in Flint\, Michigan. Individuals whose court hearings are idiosyncratically rescheduled tend to spend more time in the county jail and have worsened outcomes prior to the launch of IGNITE. Afterwards\, individuals who are more exposed to IGNITE via rescheduling see dramatically reduced rates of violent and suicidal incidents in the jail and lowered recidivism post-release.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/marcella-alsan-harvard-university/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
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