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Building a 21st century infrastructure for monitoring poverty and inequality, developing policy, and training a new generation of leaders
CPI's Basic Income Lab is Growing!

We are pleased to welcome Marie-Laure Mulayi to the Basic Income Lab at the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality. As a doctoral student at KU Leuven’s Center for Sociological Research (CeSo), Marie-Laure is part of an inter-university project investigating the feasibility of introducing a basic income in Belgium. Her key research question: Do people view a basic income as a basic right? Or do they see it as illegitimate? Welcome Marie-Laure!

CPI's Social Network Lab is Growing!

We are pleased to welcome Si Qiao to the Social Network Lab at the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality. Holding a PhD, MSc, BEng, and BSc in the fields of Urban Planning and Design, Geomatics, Geography and Computer Science, Si is interested in the digital revolution's effects on how people move through cities and interact with others. She'll be working with the Social Network Lab to build a new full-featured National Network dataset. Welcome Si!

Coping with Hardship

In collaboration with the Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta and Boston, the CPI has released a new report examining how low-income people cope with hardship. This report is part of the CPI's ongoing testing of the American Voices Project ... the country's first nationally-representative qualitative dataset that covers everyday life in rich detail.

Natalie Foster and Solana Rice in conversation
with Juliana Bidadanure

 
Please join us for a conversation with Natalie Foster, founder of the Economic Security Project, and author of The Guarantee (just released April 23). She will be joined by Solana Rice, co-founder of Liberation in a Generation, and Juliana Bidadanure, Associate Professor of Philosophy at NYU, founder of the Stanford Basic Income Lab (BIL), and senior advisor of BIL. The event will be held at Stanford's Center on Poverty and Inequality, 30 Alta Rd, from 3-5:30pm on Tuesday, May 14, 2024. This event is co-sponsored by the Stanford Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society (PACS). If you are interested in attending, please email Laura Somers (lfsomers@stanford.edu).
Beyond Day Jobs
Should artists have a 'regular job' by day and produce art by night? Or is there a better funding model? Join a conversation with artist and organizer Tatiana Vahan, poet and writer Kevin Dublin, Naja Gordon from Creatives Rebuild New York, and Marie-Laure Mulayi, visiting researcher in the Basic Income Lab at the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality.  The event will be held at the Cantor Arts Center on Thursday, May 23, 2024.
Extramural Mentored Fellowship
The University of Wisconsin-Madison Retirement and Disability Research Center and the Institute for Research on Poverty are soliciting research proposals on poverty, retirement, and disability policy. Application deadline is Wednesday, May 15, 2024.
Mothers Living in Poverty
The University of Wisconsin-Madison invites you to join a webinar, Surveillance of Mothers Living In Poverty on Wednesday, May 15, 2024 at 2pm EST. In this webinar, Dr. Darcey Merritt and Dr. Kelley Fong will draw on their extensive work with mothers whose parenting has been monitored by Child Protective Services (CPS).
A selection of poverty and inequality papers recently released by CPI affiliates

Heterogeneous Impacts of Sentencing Decisions
Andrew Jordan, Ezra Karger, & Derek Neal – NBER
 
The Walls Within: The Politics of Immigration in Modern America
Sarah R. Coleman & Jennifer Hochschild – American Historical Review
 
An Algorithm for the Self-Organisation of Collective Self-Governance
Asimina Mertzani, Josiah Ober, & Jeremy Pitt – IEE International Conference

Neither Friend nor Foe: Ethnic Segregation in School Social Networks
Chloe Bracegirdle, Jan O. Jonsson, & Olivia Spiegler – Socius
 
Social Sandwiching and Paid Work in Later Life: Consequences on Mental Health
Marco AlbertiniNoah Lewin-EpsteinMerril Silverstein, & Aviad Tur-Sinai – Innovation in Aging
 
Where Do They Go? The Destinations of Residents Moving from Gentrifying Neighborhoods
Lance Freeman, Jackelyn Hwang, Tyler Haupert, & Iris Zhang – Urban Affairs Review
 
The Graduate School Pipeline and First-Generation/Working-Class Inequalities  
Allison L. Hurst, Vincent Roscigno, Anthony Abraham Jack, Monica McDermott, Deborah M. Warnock, Jose A. Munoz, Wendi Johnson, Elizabeth M. Lee, Colby R. King, David Brady, Robert D. Francis, Kevin Delaney, & Margaret Weigers Vitullo – Sociology of Education
 

Immigrant–Native Pay Gap Driven by Lack of Access to High-Paying Jobs
Are Skeie Hermansen, Andrew Penner, Marta Elvira, Olivier Godechot, Martin Hällsten, Lasse Folke Henriksen, Feng Hou, Zoltán Lippényi, Trond Petersen, Malte Reichelt, Halil Ibrahim Sabanci, Mirna Safi, Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, & Erik Vickstrom – HAL Open Science
 
Examining Racial (In) Equity in School-Closure Patterns in California  
Francis A. Pearman II, Camille Luong, & Marie Greene – PACE
 
A Synthesis of Evidence for Policy from Behavioural Science during COVID-19
Kai Ruggeri et al. – Nature
 
Evaluating the Accuracy of 2020 Census Block-Level Estimates in California
Robert Bozick, Lane F. Burgette, Ethan Sharygin, Regina A. Shih, Beverly Weidmer, Michael Tzen, Aaron Kofner, Jennie E. Brand, & Hiram Beltrán-Sánchez – Demography
 
Social Mobility  
Anthony Heath & Yaojun Li – Wiley
 
Household Mobility and Mortgage Rate Lock  
Jack Liebersohn & Jesse Rothstein – California Policy Lab
 
Unrealized Integration in Education, Sociology, and Society
Prudence L. Carter – American Sociological Review
 
Causal Inference in the Social Sciences 
Guido W. Imbens – Annual Review of Statistics and Its Application
 
The Great Resignation, Employment, and Wages in Health Care
Amitabh Chandra & Louis-Jonas Heizlsperger – NEJM Catalyst

The Sociology of Trust
Oliver Schilke, Martin Reimann, & Karen S. Cook – Elgar
 
The Walls Within: The Politics of Immigration in Modern America
Sarah R. Coleman & Jennifer Hochschild – American Historical Review
 
Interpreting the Will of the People: Social Preferences over Ordinal Outcomes
Sandro Ambuehl & Douglas Bernheim  – ECONSTOR
 
Bridging Social Network and Life Course Research: Unlocking the Analytical Potential
M. Buchman – Europe PMC
 
Help for the Heartland? The Employment and Electoral Effects of the Trump Tariffs in the United States
David Autor, Anne Beck, David Dorn, & Gordon H. Hanson – NBER

Stanford Education Data Archive Technical Documentation
Erin M. Fahle, Sean F. Reardon, Benjamin R. Shear, Andrew D. Ho, & Jie Min – NaN
 
Can Restorative Justice Conferencing Reduce Recidivism? Evidence From the Make-it-Right Program
Yotam Shem-Tov, Steven Raphael, & Alissa Skog – Econometrica
 
Homelessness and the Persistence of Deprivation
Bruce D. Meyer, Angela Wyse, Gillian Meyer, Alexa Grunwaldt, & Derek Wu – NaN
 
Come Together: Firm Boundaries and Delegation
Laura Alfaro, Nick Bloom, Paola Conconi, Harald Fadinger, Patrick Legros, Andrew F Newman, Raffaella Sadun, & John Van Reenen – Journal of the European Economic Association
 
Dynamism Diminished: The Role of Housing Markets and Credit Conditions
Steven J. Davis & John C. Haltiwanger – NBER
 
Regression Inside Out
Eric W. Schoon, David Melamed, & Donald L. Breiger – Cambridge University Press
 
Desistance as an Intergenerational Process
Christopher Wildeman & Robert J. Sampson – Annual Review of Criminology
 
Introduction to special issue of Journal of Urban Economics: Race, Social Justice, and Cities
Philippe Aghion, Leah Boustan, Caroline Hoxby, & Jerome Vandenbussche – Brookings Institution
 
Cleaning Up the Neighborhood: White Influx and Differential Requests for Services
Nima Dahir, Jackelyn Hwang, & Ang Yu – Socius
 
The Causal Effect of Parent Occupation on Child
Ian Lundberg, Daniel Molitor, & Jennie E. Brand – Association of Population Centers
 
Presumed Competent: The Strategic Adaptation of Asian Americans in Education and the Labor Market
Jennifer Lee, Kimberly Goyette, Xi Song, & Yu Xie – Annual Review of Sociology
 
Can An Economic Crisis Shift Attitudes From Socialism to Capitalism?  Evidence From a Quasi Natural Experiment
Ran Abramitzky, Netanel Ben-Porath, Victor Lavy, & Michal Palgi  – NaN
 
The Impact of the Level and Timing of Parental Resources on Child Development and Intergenerational Mobility

Sadegh S. M. Eshaghnia, James J. Heckman, & Rasmus Landersø – Institute of Labor Economics

About 16 Million Children in Low-Income Families Would Gain in FIrst Year of Bipartisan Child Tax Credit Expansion
Kris Cox, Chuck Marr, Sarah Calame, Stephanie Hingtgen, George Fenton, & Arloc Sherman – Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
 
Work-Family Justice: Its Meanings and Implementation
Caitlyn Collins, Ameeta Jaga, Nancy Folbre, M. Rosario Castro Bernardini, Sherry Leiwant, Vicki Shabo, & Janet Gornick – Work and Family Researchers Network


Unconscionability and Poverty
Mark G. Kelman – SMU Law Review Forum
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A research center supported by the Institute for Research in the Social Sciences at Stanford University, the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality is partly supported by the Elfenworks Foundation, the Koret Foundation, Stanford Impact Labs, and WorkRise.

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