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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:20231025T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231025T131500
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20230928T224409Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260210T233033Z
UID:10000814-1698235200-1698239700@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Julia Strasser\, George Washington University\, "Who is Providing Contraception & Abortion Care in the US? Using Claims Data to Study the Reproductive Health Workforce"
DESCRIPTION:Biography:\nJulia Strasser\, DrPH\, MPH\, is the Director of the Jacobs Institute of Women’s Health and an Assistant Research Professor of Health Policy and Management at the George Washington University. Dr. Strasser’s research focuses on contraception\, abortion\, and access to care for underserved populations. She has worked in healthcare\, focusing on policy and research\, for over 15 years\, including previous positions at the National Cancer Institute\, the National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association\, and Planned Parenthood of Western Washington. She holds a DrPH in Health Policy from The George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health\, an MPH from The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health with a concentration in women’s and reproductive health\, and a BA in History from Yale University. \nWho is Providing Contraception & Abortion Care in the US? Using Claims Data to Study the Reproductive Health Workforce\nAbstract:\nThe clinical workforce providing contraception and abortion care in the US is a critical determinant of access to care. However\, a series of data limitations has made it difficult to study this workforce at the national level. Using national-level medical and prescription claims datasets\, we have constructed a first-of-its-kind database and analyzed various aspects of this workforce\, including its composition by specialty\, distribution by state and county\, and shifts over time. This presentation will discuss: 1. Differences in provision of contraceptive services by physician specialty and advanced practice clinician type 2. Changes to the contraception and abortion care workforce during Covid-19\, and 3. Association between residency training for family medicine physicians and provision of reproductive health services to Medicaid beneficiaries. \nA recording of this event can be found here.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/julia-strasser-george-washington-university/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231018T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231018T131500
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20230928T223756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231010T213501Z
UID:10000813-1697630400-1697634900@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Pauline Rossi\, Ecole Polytechnique-CREST\, "Drivers of Fertility: Experimental Evidence from Burkina Faso (joint with Pascaline Dupas\, Seema Jayachandran and Adriana Lleras-Muney)"
DESCRIPTION:Biography:\nPauline Rossi is an Associate Professor of Economics at Ecole Polytechnique-CREST and a Research Affiliate at CEPR. Her fields of research are Applied Microeconomics\, Development Economics and Family Economics. She is the PI of the ERC Starting Grant “Peers and Possible Partners: Exploring the Origins of Population Long-term Equilibria” (P3OPLE). She is visiting CCPR in October-November 2023. \nDrivers of Fertility: Experimental Evidence from Burkina Faso (joint with Pascaline Dupas\, Seema Jayachandran and Adriana Lleras-Muney)\nAbstract:\nWe conducted a study among 14\,545 households in rural Burkina Faso to test some of the leading explanations for persistently high fertility rates in West Africa. First\, we reject the oft-cited explanation of limited access to contraception. Women in communities randomly assigned to have free access to medical contraception for three years did not have lower birth rates. Second\, we cross-randomized additional interventions to test whether high desired fertility stems from incorrect or sticky beliefs and norms\, specifically mis-perceptions about the child mortality rate\, limited exposure to opposing views\, and social pressure. None of these interventions\, or combinations of them\, had any detectable effect on realized fertility\, desired fertility\, or contraceptive use. Our results are consistent with couples personally benefiting from having a large family size and suggest that policies aimed at reducing fertility through family planning interventions may have only limited impact in such contexts.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/pauline-rossi-ecole-polytechnique-crest/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231011T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231011T131500
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20230928T211314Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231005T185613Z
UID:10000812-1697025600-1697030100@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Gary Solon\, University of Michigan\, "What Are We Weighting For?" (STC Workshop)
DESCRIPTION:Biography:\nGary Solon is Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Michigan. He was Eller Professor of Economics at the University of Arizona during 2015-2018 and Professor of Economics at Michigan State University during 2007-2015. He is a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research\, a fellow of the Society of Labor Economists\, and a member of the Conference on Research in Income and Wealth. His research includes studies of family and community background effects on socioeconomic status\, earnings dynamics over the life cycle\, cyclical fluctuations in the labor market\, and microeconometric methods. \nWhat Are We Weighting For?\nAbstract:\nThe purpose of this paper is to help empirical economists think through when and how to weight the data used in estimation. We start by distinguishing two purposes of estimation: to estimate population descriptive statistics and to estimate causal effects. In the former type of research\, weighting is called for when it is needed to make the analysis sample representative of the target population. In the latter type\, the weighting issue is more nuanced. We discuss three distinct potential motives for weighting when estimating causal effects: (1) to achieve precise estimates by correcting for heteroskedasticity\, (2) to achieve consistent estimates by correcting for endogenous sampling\, and (3) to identify average partial effects in the presence of unmodeled heterogeneity of effects. In each case\, we find that the motive sometimes does not apply in situations where practitioners often assume it does. We recommend diagnostics for assessing the advisability of weighting\, and we suggest methods for appropriate inference.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/gary-solon-university-of-michigan/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar,CCPR Workshop,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231004T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231004T130000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20231003T004638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231005T191203Z
UID:10000835-1696420800-1696424400@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Seminar Series: Welcome and Introduction
DESCRIPTION:California Center for Population Research Seminar Series \nWelcome and Introductions \nWednesday\, October 4\, 2023 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm 4240A Public Affairs Building \n(Lunch will be provided) \nThis will be the kick-off event for the start of the upcoming 2023-24 CCPR Seminar Series. Please join us to learn all about CCPR as we welcome new affiliates and reconnect in person.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/seminar-series-welcome-and-introduction/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Conference,CCPR Seminar,Divisional Publish
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230531T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230531T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220728T231105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230531T165944Z
UID:10000794-1685534400-1685539200@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Robert Mare Student Lecture
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Caitlin is a doctoral candidate in Sociology at UCLA. She is broadly interested in inequality in educational and occupational attainment\, the role of education in social stratification processes\, and policy approaches to addressing poverty and inequality. She is also interested in applications of causal inference using large-scale survey data. Her dissertation explores the ways that initial college enrollment decisions shape the transition to adulthood\, with a focus on the least selective four-year college options. Caitlin is a student affiliate at the California Center for Population Research and a research fellow for the Los Angeles Education Research Institute. In the fall\, she will start a postdoctoral fellowship with Stanford Impact Labs\, where she will be studying the effects of guaranteed income and baby bonds with the Economic Inclusion Project. \nThe Power of a Degree: Examining the Direct and Indirect Effects of Broad-Access College Enrollment on Economic Disadvantage \nAbstract: As the availability of high-quality jobs for less-educated workers has diminished\, college is seen as the surest way to avoid adverse socioeconomic outcomes. Yet\, the benefits to college depend not only on whether an individual enrolls in school but also where. This study uses longitudinal data sources to examine the impact of enrollment in minimally or non-selective four-year colleges on bachelor’s degree completion and economic disadvantage. My findings show positive effects of broad-access four-year college enrollment on bachelor’s degree completion relative to community college enrollment\, but negative effects relative to more-selective college. However\, these differences in degree completion contribute to only modest changes in economic disadvantage in early adulthood. Instead\, not enrolling in any college is associated with greater economic disadvantage than enrolling in a broad-access four-year college. These findings collectively underscore the importance of any college enrollment in preventing economic disadvantage and the pivotal role of bachelor’s degree completion in reaping the economic benefits of attending college. However\, they also highlight the need to address structural inequalities in college access to reduce disparities in educational attainment and emphasize the importance of considering the counterfactual group when evaluating the returns to college selectivity. \nBiography: Pablo Geraldo Bastías is a PhD Candidate in Sociology at UCLA. His research examines how institutions influence inequality in education and the labor market\, with a particular focus in the comparative study of skill formation systems and school-to-work transitions. Methodologically\, he is interested in the intersection of causal inference using graphical models\, machine learning\, and network analysis. After graduating from UCLA\, he will be a Postdoctoral Prize Research Fellowship in Sociology at Nuffield College\, University of Oxford.  \nSecondary effects of tuition-free college on high school trajectories: Evidence from Chile \nAbstract: The discussion about the costs of college education\, who has to pay for it\, and its implication for social inequality and mobility\, is of primary importance for educational stratification scholars and policy makers. While increasing evidence has accumulated on the impact of access to secure funding in reducing enrollment and completion gaps in higher education\, there is less evidence on how large-scale policy changes on college funding would affect students’ decision earlier in their educational trajectories\, in anticipation of benefiting from such policies in the future. In this study I show how the introduction of tuition-free college in Chile (2016) affected the educational trajectories of high school students. Using administrative data analyzed in an event-study framework\, I provide evidence of the positive effect that increasing access to guaranteed funding for higher education had on secondary students\, lowering grade retention and dropout rates\, especially among the most socially disadvantaged students.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/robert-mare-student-lecture-2/
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
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230524T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230524T133000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220728T231644Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230526T000913Z
UID:10000798-1684929600-1684935000@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Difference-In-Difference Panel Discussion and Mini Conference
DESCRIPTION:Differences-in-differences Mini-conference \nMay 24\, 2023  \nUCLA\, California Center for Population Research \n9-11:30am Speakers hold for meetings \n12-1:30pm [CCPR seminar slot] Panel discussion: What’s new with differences-in-differences?  \nAndrew Goodman-Bacon (Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank)\, Alyssa Bilinski (Brown)\, Jon Roth (Brown)\, Pedro Sant’Anna (Vanderbilt)\, Jeff Wooldridge (MSU)  \nSHORT LUNCH BREAK & ROOM SET UP \n2:15-3:00pm Andrew Goodman-Bacon (Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank)\, Pedro Sant’Anna (Vanderbilt) \n“Difference-in-Differences with a Continuous Treatments” \nThis paper analyzes difference-in-differences setups with a continuous treatment. We show that treatment effect on the treated-type parameters can be identified under a generalized parallel trends assumption that is similar to the binary treatment setup. However\, interpreting differences in these parameters across different values of the treatment can be particularly challenging due to treatment effect heterogeneity. We discuss alternative\, typically stronger\, assumptions that alleviate these challenges. We also provide a variety of treatment effect decomposition results\, highlighting that parameters associated with popular two-way fixed-effect specifications can be hard to interpret\, even when there are only two time periods. We introduce alternative estimation strategies that do not suffer from these drawbacks. Our results also cover cases where (i) there is no available untreated comparison group and (ii) there are multiple periods and variation in treatment timing\, which are both common in empirical work. \n3:00-3:45pm Alyssa Bilinski (Brown) \n“Parallel Trends in an Unparalleled Pandemic: Difference-in-Differences for Infectious Disease Policy Evaluation”  \nOver the course of the COVID-19 pandemic\, researchers have extensively studied the impact of public health interventions\, such as stay-at-home orders and mask policies\, on disease incidence and mortality.  Many policy evaluations employ a difference-in-differences (DiD) design\, which assumes that treatment and non-experimental comparison groups would have moved in parallel in expectation\, absent the intervention (the “parallel trends assumption”).  While researchers have used different specifications to capture potential non-linearities\, the plausibility of these specifications in the context of dynamic infection transmission is less well-understood.  Our work bridges this gap by formalizing epidemiological assumptions required for different DiD specifications\, positing an underlying susceptible\, infectious\, recovered (SIR) model.  We first explore common DiD specifications\, demonstrating that these often imply strict epidemiological assumptions.  For example\, DiD modeling raw cases or deaths as an outcome will be biased unless treatment and comparison groups have the same initial conditions\, susceptible fraction\, and transmission rate (“force of infection”); using a log transformation allows for different initial conditions\, but requires equal transmission rates and and susceptible fractions among groups.  Furthermore\, even if estimates are unbiased\, both specifications are often highly anti-conservative under standard error assumptions of a stochastic agent-based SIR model.  We then present more robust alternatives\, including modeling log difference as the primary outcome and modeling the causal effect of an intervention on the effective reproduction number\, rather than cases or deaths.  We demonstrate the implications of this work reanalyzing prior work on school mask policies. \n3:45pm Coffee break \n4-4:45pm Jeff Woodridge (MSU) \n“Estimating Distributional Treatment Effects with Staggered Interventions for Panel Data” \nI propose simple\, parametric approaches for estimating distributions of potential outcomes in a staggered difference-in-differences setting. The approach relies on versions of no anticipation and parallel trends assumptions. Estimators include imputation estimators or pooled maximum likelihood estimation. The approach can be applied to discrete\, continuous\, and mixed outcomes. A leading application is estimating quantile treatment effects in staggered DiD settings for a continuous outcome. \n4:45-5:30pm Jonathan Roth (Brown) \n“Log-like? Identified ATEs Defined with Zero-valued Outcomes are (Arbitrarily) Scale-Dependent” \nEconomists frequently estimate average treatment effects (ATEs) for transformations of the outcome that are well-defined at zero but behave like logpyq when y is large (e.g.\, logp1 ` yq\, arcsinhpyq). We show that these ATEs depend arbitrarily on the units of the outcome\, and thus should not be interpreted as percentage effects. In line with this result\, we find that estimated treatment effects for arcsinh-transformed outcomes published in the American Economic Review change substantially when we multiply the units of the outcome by 100 (e.g.\, convert dollars to cents). To help delineate alternative approaches\, we prove that when the outcome can equal zero\, there is no average treatment effect of the form EP rgpY p1q\, Y p0qqs that is point-identified and unit-invariant. We conclude by discussing sensible alternative target parameters for settings with zero-valued outcomes that relax at least one of these requirements. \n  \n 
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/workshop-4/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Conference,CCPR Seminar,CCPR Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/JEiBvJva_400x400-400x321-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230517T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230517T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220728T230831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230520T003328Z
UID:10000793-1684324800-1684329600@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Steven Stillman\, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Steven Stillman received his PhD in Economics from the University of Washington in 2000. Prior to moving to Italy in 2016\, he was a Professor of Economics at the University of Otago in New Zealand. His research focuses on empirical labour economics\, specialising in the behaviour of individuals and households\, and the interplay between government policy and human behavior. He has done extensive work examining the impact of migration on immigrants and their families exploiting a lottery used to allocate migrant quota slots. In recent work\, he has also examined voting behavior along a number of dimensions and how individuals have responded to changes in a number of policies\, including minimum wages\, the drinking age and doctor’s fees. \nLearning About Leave: Peer Influences in Maternal Leave Decisions \nAbstract: We examine how the parental leave decisions of mothers are influenced by parental leave decisions made by their work colleagues (peers) using income tax data on the universe of women who gave birth in New Zealand between 2002 and 2018. Maternal leave in New Zealand replaces 100% of mothers’ income up to a fairly low maximum. We use this maximum threshold to implement a regression kink design\, estimating the causal impact of peer leave decisions on mothers’ own leave decisions. We find that for every week that peers shorten their maternity leave in response to this threshold\, mothers reduce their own leave by 0.5 to 0.6 weeks. This effect is larger in smaller firms and in situations where the peer is more likely to influence the decision of the study mother. \nA recording of Dr. Stillman’s presentation may be accessed here.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/steven-stillman-free-university-of-bozen-bolzano/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/618.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230510T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230510T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20230501T163218Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230508T162707Z
UID:10000672-1683720000-1683724800@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Itzik Fadlon\, University of California San Diego
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Itzik Fadlon is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of California\, San Diego and a Research Associate in the programs on Aging and Public Economics at the National Bureau of Economic Research. His primary fields of interest are public finance\, health economics\, and labor/family economics. His work studies household behavior and the effects of government policies\, as well as how these impacts on households’ behavior translate to the optimal design of social policies. His work has been published in leading journals such as American Economic Journal: Applied Economics\, American Economic Review\, Journal of Health Economics\, Journal of Public Economics\, and Review of Economics and Statistics. Itzik received his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University in May 2015. Before joining UCSD in 2016 as an Assistant Professor\, Itzik spent a year as a Postdoctoral Fellow in Disability Policy Research at the National Bureau of Economic Research\, and he spent the academic year of 2019-2020 as a Visiting Scholar in Aging and Health Research at the NBER. \nTitle: “Causal Effects of Early Career Sorting on Labor and Marriage Market Choices: A Foundation for Gender Disparities and Norms” \nAbstract: We study whether and how early labor market choices determine longer-run career versus family outcomes differentially for male and female professionals. We analyze the physician labor market by exploiting a randomized lottery that determines the sorting of Danish physicians into internships across local labor markets. Using administrative data spanning ten years after physicians’ graduations\, we find causal effects of early-career sorting on a range of life cycle outcomes that cascade from labor market choices\, including human capital accumulation and occupational choice\, to marriage market choices\, including matching and fertility. The persistent effects are entirely concentrated among women\, whereas men experience only temporary career disruptions. The evidence points to differential family-career tradeoffs and the mentorship employers provide as channels underlying this gender divergence. Our findings have implications for policies aimed at gender equality in outcomes\, as they reveal how persistent gaps can arise even in institutionally gender-neutral settings with early-stage equality of opportunity. \n 
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/itzik-fadlon-university-of-california-san-diego/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/picture1-1-e1683563164778.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230503T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230503T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220826T063415Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230428T001624Z
UID:10000805-1683115200-1683120000@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Zack Almquist\, University of Washington
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Zack W. Almquist is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology\, Adjunct Associate Professor of Statistics\, and Senior Data Science Fellow at the eScience Institute at the University of Washington. Before coming to UW in 2020\, Prof. Almquist held positions as a Research Scientist at Facebook\, Inc and as an Assistant Professor of Sociology and Statistics at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Almquist is a recipient of the American Sociological Association’s Section on Methodology’s Leo Goodman Award. He is also a recipient of the NSF’s CAREER Award and the ARO’s Young Investigator Program Award. He is currently the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Mathematical Sociology. His research centers on the development and application of mathematical\, computational and statistical methodology to problems and theory of social networks\, demography\, homelessness\, and environmental action and governance. \nA Qualitative and Quantitative PIT Count using Respondent Driven Sampling (RDS): Understanding and Counting Unsheltered Homelessness in King County \nAbstract: Traditionally\, unsheltered Point in Time (PIT) Counts are the result of volunteers conducting an in-person head-count of individuals experiencing homelessness on a single night. This resource-intensive method is widely understood to be an undercount. It also fails to capture essential qualitative data about what people living unsheltered experience and need. \nThis past spring\, the King County Regional Homelessness Authority (RHA)\, in coordination with Professor Zack W. Almquist (University of Washington) and Lived Experience Coalition (LEC)\, took a novel approach to the PIT. The RHA conducted the 2022 unsheltered PIT count as a combined qualitative interview process and quantitative survey over the course of a month. The respondent selection for both the qualitative and quantitative surveys followed a Respondent Driven Sampling (RDS) protocol. RDS provides a sampling strategy for estimating size and percentages of hard-to-reach populations that lack an administrative sampling frame. \nDuring this seminar\, I will provide an overview of the RHA partnership effort\, and how we executed this novel approach to the PIT. I will review the history of RDS as a means of sampling vulnerable populations\, and I will cover the implementation of the sampling  and estimation strategies based on the RHA RDS sample. Finally\, I will review the demographics provided to HUD\, and what we learned from conducting the RDS sample for the PIT count\, and how it can and should affect future PIT counts going forwards. \nYou may access the seminar using this link.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/zack_almquist_washington/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/mg_7901_2-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230426T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230426T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
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
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230419T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230419T133000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
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
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230405T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230405T130000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
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
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230308T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230308T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220822T191810Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230503T215444Z
UID:10000803-1678276800-1678281600@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Workshop: From preprints to tweets: The professional benefits and potential perils of online presence
DESCRIPTION:From preprints to tweets: the professional benefits and potential perils of online presence \nPanelists: Elizabeth Rose Mayeda (Epi) and Julian Londoño-Vélez (Econ) \nModerator: Patrick Heuveline (Soc) \nElizabeth Rose Mayeda (she/her) is an Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. Dr. Mayeda’s research focuses on identifying modifiable determinants of cognitive decline\, dementia\, and stroke in late life. Her research program has both applied and methodological themes. She focuses on describing and identifying mechanisms contributing to disparities in late-life cognitive and brain health and also leads work addressing methodological challenges in longitudinal studies of stroke\, cognitive aging\, and dementia risk. Her long-term research goals are to: (1) identify effective population-level strategies to prevent dementia and eliminate disparities in dementia and (2) develop research tools to strengthen causal inference in dementia research and lifecourse epidemiology. \nJuliana Londoño-Vélez is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of California\, Los Angeles\, and a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Her work primarily focuses on inequality and redistributive tax and transfer policies\, with a special interest in developing countries. \nPatrick Heuveline is a Professor of Sociology at UCLA. He is also the Associate Director of the UCLA California Center for Population Research. \nWorkshop Description: Our panelists will discuss how to advertise yourself and your work online. Should you have your own website and\, if so\, what should be included (or not)? Should you post unpublished work as preprints and\, if so\, at what stage of development? Should you be active on social media and\, if so\, how much is too much?
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/workshop-from-preprints-to-tweets-the-professional-benefits-and-potential-perils-of-online-presence/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar,CCPR Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/JEiBvJva_400x400-400x321-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230301T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230301T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220728T225257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230222T234243Z
UID:10000650-1677672000-1677676800@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Sonalde Desai\, University of Maryland (IN-PERSON EVENT ONLY)
DESCRIPTION:Please note that this is an in-person event only. The talk will not be live streamed or recorded.  \nBiography: Sonalde Desai (Distinguished University Professor\, Department of Sociology\, University of Maryland and Professor and Centre Director\, NCAER-National Data Innovation Center\, New Delhi) is a demographer whose work deals primarily with social transformation and its impact on the lives of individuals with a focus on education\, employment\, gender\, and maternal and child health. She leads the India Human Development Survey of over 40\,000 households\, one of the few national panel surveys in India providing a rich and free public resource for studying the transformation of Indian society in the 21st Century. Since April 2020\, Desai and her colleagues at NDIC have carried out telephone surveys around COVID-related experiences in Delhi National Capital Region. She received a Ph.D. from Stanford University and post-doctoral training at the University of Chicago and RAND Corporation. Desai was elected President of the Population Association of America for 2022. She is a frequent contributor to Indian newspapers and has published extensively in Indian and international journals. \nThe Global Aspirational Class and Its Demographic Fortunes \nAbstract: Global educational expansion and growth in middle-income households in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) have brought worldwide attention to the social transformation underway in many countries. Yet\, simultaneously\, income inequalities within LMICs have also grown sharply\, and employment opportunities have lagged behind the aspirational shifts. This seminar will examine the changes in education and employment opportunities in LMICs over the past three decades and explore changes in marriage\, fertility\, and investments in children that have accompanied these economic changes.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/sonalde-desai-university-of-maryland/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/1517529689435.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230222T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230222T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220728T224855Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230223T211411Z
UID:10000649-1677067200-1677072000@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Chris Blattman\, University of Chicago
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Chris Blattman is the Ramalee E. Pearson Professor of Global Conflict Studies at The University of Chicago’s Pearson Institute and Harris School of Public Policy. He is an economist and political scientist\, and his work on violence\, crime\, and poverty has been widely covered by The New York Times\, The Washington Post\, The Wall Street Journal\, Financial Times\, The Economist\, Forbes\, Slate\, Vox\, and NPR. His most recent book is Why We Fight: The Roots of War and the Paths to Peace. \nDr. Blattman was previously faculty at Columbia and Yale Universities\, and holds a PhD in Economics from UC Berkeley and a Master’s in Public Administration and International Development (MPA/ID) from the Harvard Kennedy School. He co-leads the Development Economics Center at the University of Chicago\, the Peace & Recovery sector at Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA)\, the Crime\, Violence and Conflict initiative at MIT’s Poverty Action Lab (JPAL). \nMuch of Dr. Blattman’s work designs and tests solutions to violence and poverty\, and he has worked mainly in Colombia\, Liberia\, Uganda\, Ethiopia\, Mexico\, and Chicago. \nPredicting and Preventing Gun Violence: An Experimental Evaluation of READI Chicago  \nAbstract: Gun violence is the most pressing public safety problem in American cities. We report results from a randomized controlled trial (N = 2\, 456) of a community-researcher partnership—the Rapid Employment and Development Initiative (READI Chicago)—which provided 18 months of a supported job alongside cognitive behavioral therapy and other social supports. Algorithmic and human referral methods identified men with strikingly high scope for gun violence reduction: for every 100 people in the control group\, there were over 11 shooting and homicide victimizations during the 20-month outcome period. Take-up and retention rates were comparable to programs for people facing far lower mortality risk. There is no statistically significant change in an index combining three measures of serious violence\, the study’s primary outcome. But one component\, shooting and homicide arrests\, shows a suggestive decline of 64 percent (p = 0.15). Because shootings are so costly\, READI generates social savings between $174\,000 and $858\,000 per participant\, implying a benefit-cost ratio between 3.8 and 18.8 to 1. Moreover\, participants referred by outreach workers—a pre-specified subgroup—show enormous declines in both arrests and victimizations for shootings and homicides that remain statistically significant even after multiple testing adjustments. These declines are concentrated among outreach referrals with high predicted risk\, suggesting that human and algorithmic targeting may work better together. \nThe recording may be accessed here.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/chris-blattman-university-of-chicago/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/chrisblattman-byjasonsmith-5138_0.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230215T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230215T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20221011T174647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230223T211326Z
UID:10000662-1676462400-1676467200@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Juliana Londoño-Vélez\, UCLA
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Juliana Londoño-Vélez is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of California\, Los Angeles\, an NBER Faculty Research Fellow\, a J-PAL Affiliate\, and a Faculty Affiliate at CCPR and CEGA. Juliana works on inequality and redistributive tax and transfer policies\, with a particular interest in developing countries. \nTitle: “Financial Aid and Social Mobility: Evidence from Colombia’s Ser Pilo Paga.” \nAbstract: “We study the effects of financial aid on human capital and social mobility. In 2014\, Colombia implemented a nationwide financial aid program covering the tuition of four-year undergraduate programs at 33 “high-quality” universities. We estimate effects on educational and labor market outcomes realized seven years after high school completion. We leverage the program’s discontinuous assignment rules based on test scores and household poverty using a regression discontinuity design and identify effects away from these discontinuities using difference-in-differences. First\, financial aid has a long-lasting expansion of college access and quality\, exposing students to colleges with high learning and earnings productivity. Moreover\, it boosts social mobility by expanding college attainment\, learning\, and earnings and slashes the wealth gaps in attainment\, learning\, and earnings among equally-achieving students. Crucially\, these sizable benefits are not offset by corresponding losses for nonrecipients. As a result\, financial aid improves both equity and efficiency. Thanks to financial aid\, colleges act as “engines of social mobility” rather than as “bastions of privilege.” \n\nThe recording may be accessed here.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/juliana-londono-velez-ucla/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Unknown-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230208T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230208T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220728T223624Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230215T184143Z
UID:10000648-1675857600-1675862400@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Robert Hummer\, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Robert A. Hummer is the Howard W. Odum Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Fellow of the Carolina Population Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-CH). He moved to UNC-CH in 2015 after spending 19 years at the University of Texas at Austin\, where he served as Director of their NICHD-supported Population Research Center\, PI of their NICHD-supported Training Program in Population Studies\, and Chairperson of their Department of Sociology. He recently served as the 2021 President of the Population Association of America and is currently a member of the Committee on Population of the National Academies of Sciences\, Engineering\, and Medicine. His research focuses on the accurate documentation and more complete understanding of health and mortality disparities in the United States. He is currently Director and Principal Investigator of the long-running National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health)\, which is now funded by the National Institute on Aging and five co-funding institutes/offices (NICHD\, NIMHD\, NIDA\, OBSSR\, ODP). Now in its sixth wave\, Add Health is one of the most innovative and well-utilized nationally representative cohort studies of Americans ever undertaken and provides data for thousands of researchers to more fully understand the multi-level (biological\, survey\, contextual) life course factors that contribute to health and health disparities in US adolescents and adults. \nTitle: Assessing Cognitive Functioning and Health Disparities in Early Midlife: A Sneak Peek at Wave VI of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) \nAbstract: For over 25 years\, the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) project has provided the scientific community with innovative data to understand the health and social life of a nationally representative cohort of Americans who were in grades 7-12 in 1994-95. The Add Health cohort is now in their 40s. Recently funded primarily by the National Institute on Aging\, Wave VI of Add Health is currently in the field and is focused on providing the scientific community with novel data on the cognitive and sensory/physical functioning\, social life\, health\, and health behavior of the cohort. This presentation by the principal investigator and director of Add Health will focus on findings from some of the Wave VI pilot data\, which tested innovative methods for assessing the cognitive\, physical\, and sensory functioning of this early midlife cohort. The presentation will also provide an overview of the innovative design of Wave VI\, information on some of the new measures that have been added to the survey and biological data collection\, and a timeline of the fieldwork and data dissemination plan. \nThe recording of Dr. Hummer’s talk may be accessed here.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/robert-hummer-university-of-north-carolina-at-chapel-hill/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/rhummer-1-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230201T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230201T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220915T030326Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230201T223535Z
UID:10000658-1675252800-1675257600@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Graeme Blair\, UCLA
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Graeme Blair is an associate professor of political science at UCLA and serves as Co-Director of Training and Methods of Evidence in Governance and Politics (EGAP). Graeme uses experiments\, field research\, and statistics to study how to reduce violence and how to improve social science research. He works primarily in Nigeria\, often in partnership with government\, civil society\, or international organizations. His work is published in journals including Science\, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences\, Science Advances\, American Political Science Review\, American Journal of Political Science\, Journal of Politics\, Journal of the American Statistical Association\, and Political Analysis. His book on community policing is forthcoming with Cambridge University Press Studies in Comparative Politics and his book on research design is forthcoming with Princeton University Press. He is the recipient of the Leamer-Rosenthal Prize for Open Social Science\, the Society for Political Methodology best statistical software award\, and the Pi Sigma Alpha best paper award. \nBetter research planning through simulation \nAbstract: The talk introduces a new way of thinking about research designs in the social sciences\, with the aim of making it easier to develop and to share strong research designs. At the heart of our approach is the MIDA framework\, in which a research design is characterized by four elements: a model\, an inquiry\, a data strategy\, and an answer strategy. We have to understand each of the four on their own and also how they interrelate. The design encodes your beliefs about the world\, it describes your questions\, and it lays out how you go about answering those questions\, both in terms of what data you collect and how you analyze it. In strong designs\, choices made in the model and inquiry are reflected in the data and answer strategies\, and vice-versa. This way of thinking pays dividends at multiple points in the research design lifecycle: planning the design\, implementing it\, and integrating the results into the broader research literature. The declaration\, diagnosis\, and redesign process informs choices made from the beginning to the end of a research project. These ideas will appear in Research Design in the Social Sciences: Declaration\, Diagnosis\, and Redesign\, forthcoming in the fall with Princeton University Press. \nTo access the recording please click here.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/graeme-blair-ucla/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/graeme-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230125T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230125T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220822T191516Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230201T223628Z
UID:10000802-1674648000-1674652800@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Charlie Branas\, Columbia University
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Dr. Charles Branas is currently Department Chair and Gelman Endowed Professor of Epidemiology at the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. Dr. Branas has conducted research that extends from urban and rural areas in the US to communities across the globe\, incorporating place-based interventions and human geography. He has led win-win science that generates new knowledge while simultaneously creating positive\, real-world changes and providing health-enhancing resources for local communities. His pioneering work on geographic access to medical care has changed the healthcare landscape\, leading to the designation of new hospitals and a series of national scientific replications in the US and other countries for many conditions: trauma\, cancer\, stroke\, etc. His research on the geography and factors underpinning gun violence has been cited by landmark Supreme Court decisions\, Congress\, and the NIH Director. With community partners\, Dr. Branas led the first citywide randomized controlled trials to transform vacant lots and abandoned buildings as sustainable solutions to improving health and safety\, including reductions in gun violence. He has worked internationally on four continents and led multi-national efforts\, producing extensive cohorts of developing nation scientists\, national health metrics\, and worldwide press coverage. \nGuns\, Places\, and Public Health \nAbstract: There are many competing influences in terms of why we have seen record levels of gun violence in the US this past year and why gun violence is now the leading cause of death in US children.  While we should continue to focus on gun laws and law enforcement as possible solutions\, both these approaches have their limitations.  As a complementary series of solutions now supported by multiple large-scale scientific studies\, addressing the basic structures and places that generate gun violence in the first place may offer scalable and more sustainable benefits to US communities long-suffering from the tragedy of gun violence. \nTo access the recording please click here.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/charlie-branas-columbia-university/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/ccb2166_cbranas.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230118T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230118T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220728T231540Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230503T215508Z
UID:10000797-1674043200-1674048000@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Computing Resource Overview Workshop
DESCRIPTION:CCPR Workshop: Computing Resources Overview \nJan 18\, 2022\, 12:00pm-1:30pm \nPresenters: Matt Lahmann \nThis workshop has two halves. In the first half\, we will dive into the 3 main computing resources that CCPR offers to affiliates\, including it’s remote and on campus offerings. At the end of the first half\, we’ll get participants signed up for hoffman2 and TS2. Once signed up\, you’ll have state of the art hardware resources and most software you’ll ever need for demographic research. In the second half\, we’ll walk through how to use these computing resources\, identifying what resource is better to use for different computing project scenarios.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/workshop-3/
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
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230111T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230111T132000
DTSTAMP:20260430T114554
CREATED:20220915T023653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230109T224011Z
UID:10000656-1673438400-1673443200@ccpr.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Benjamin R. Karney\, UCLA
DESCRIPTION:Biography: Benjamin Karney is a Professor and Chair of Social Psychology at the University of California\, Los Angeles\, and an adjunct behavioral scientist at the RAND Corporation.  His research examines intimate relationships\, especially marriage\, and focuses on how relationships are facilitated or constrained by the contexts in which they take place. Currently\, he leads the Los Angeles Project on Newlywed Development (LAPOND)\, a longitudinal study of low-income couples\, and co-directs (with Thomas Bradbury) the UCLA Marriage and Close Relationships Lab. He has twice received the National Council on Family Relation’s Reuben Hill Research and Theory Award for outstanding family science. \nTitle: Public policies and private lives: How socioeconomic status affects intimacy \nAbstract: lthough the desire for a stable\, healthy intimate partnership is nearly a human universal\, the likelihood of achieving this goal varies widely across levels of socioeconomic status. Compared to their more affluent peers\, individuals at lower rungs of the socioeconomic ladder far less likely to marry\, and once married far more likely to divorce. What happens to intimacy under conditions of financial strain and limited access to resources? In this talk\, I describe a program of research exploring answers to this question through longitudinal and observational studies of recently first-married couples recruited from lower-income neighborhoods in Los Angeles\, CA and Harris County\, TX. The results of this work highlight new directions for policies aimed at supporting and strengthening lower-income families.
URL:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/event/benjamin-r-karney-ucla/
LOCATION:4240A Public Affairs Bldg
CATEGORIES:CCPR Seminar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ccpr.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/9138dSNVy4L._SX450_-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR