Poverty,
Race and Inequality
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Independent
Report Sees Progress for State's Welfare Families After Reform
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New
Book Shows What Government Can Do to Fight Inequality
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Crossing
the Class and Color Lines--New book on Chicago's Gautreaux
Program
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Chicago
Housing's "Hidden War"
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Panel
Study to Track Impact of Illinois Welfare Reform |
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Northwestern
study finds that poverty and early learning opportunities
not race account for the gap in IQ scores between
blacks and whites
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Child,
Adolescent, and Family Studies
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New
Study Says Work Pays But Many Welfare Recipients Still Face
Hardship (See other reports).
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Study
Sees Trouble Ahead for Children in Welfare System
(Read the working
paper).
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Child
Welfare Discourse Fails to Factor in Racial Bias
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Medicaid
and Food Stamps Essential in Transition from Welfare to Work
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Panel
Discussion Urges Children's Policy Based on Up-to-Date Research
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New
Policy Brief for Three City Study of Welfare, Children & Families:
"What welfare recipients know about the new rules and what
they have to say about them"
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Comer
School Reform Project improves both academics and behavior
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Community
Development
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ABCD
Institute publishes new workbook on newspapers and neighborhoods
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Law
and Justice Studies
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Northwestern
Study Shows Great Strides in Community Policing Program
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Northwestern
study finds progress in Chicago's community policing program
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New
book offers in-depth look at "Community Policing, Chicago
Style"
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Northwestern
study finds major concerns about crime motivates high citizen
participation in Chicago's Community Policing Program
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Communications,
Media and Public Opinion
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IPR
hosts Polls, Policy, and the Future of American Democracy
Conference
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Business,
Work, and Government
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Economist
explains why more consumers are going broke
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IPR
Distinguished Public Policy Lectures
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David T. Ellwood, Dean of the John F. Kennedy School of Government and Scott M. Black Professor of Political Economy, Harvard University and Ron Haskins, Co-Director of the Center on Children and Families and Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, Senior Consultant, Annnie E. Casey Foundation speak on "Ten Years After Welfare Reform: Who Was Right, What Have We Learned, and Where Do We Need to Go Next?" |
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Heidi Hartmann, President of the Institute for Women's Policy Research, speaks on "The Earnings Gap and Women's Long-Term Economic Security" |
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Robert B. Reich, Former U.S. Secretary of Labor, speaks on "America's Real Job Problem" |
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Grover J. Whitehurst, U.S. Department of Education, speaks on "Making Education Evidence-Based: Principles, Pragmatics, and Politics" |
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John
McKnight speaks on Regenerating Community
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Rep.
Jan Schakowsky speaks on citizen activism
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Council
of Economic Adviser speaks at Northwestern
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Congressman
John Porter lectures at Northwestern
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Former
U.S. Senator Paul Simon lectures at Northwestern
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IPR
in the News
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(7/9/07) |
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610 WIOD Radio Interview - A recent study by IPR Faculty Fellow Bruce Spencer found that in a set of 271 cases, juries gave wrong verdicts in at least one out of eight cases. |
(10/30/06) |
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Scientific American - "Lonely People Wake Up with a Hormonal Boost" ABC News - "Don't Go to Bed Lonely"
IPR Faculty Fellow Emma Adam, a developmental psychologist, discusses her new study showing that elderly adults who go to bed lonely, sad, or overwhelmed receive a boost of the hormone cortisol when they awake. This energizes them to meet the demands of their day. |
(10/31/06) |
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Chicago Tribune - "North Korea and the new realpolitik." IPR Faculty Fellow Monica Prasad, a sociologist, explains how adopting an approach of equals to nuclear states through the enactment and enforcement of treaties and commitments can help to prevent nuclear proliferation. |
(10/17/06) |
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United Press International - "Study: Race less important if faring well." IPR Faculty Associate Dennis Chong, a political scientist, recently published a study, with IPR graduate student Dukhong Kim, showing that racial minorities who experience equal opportunities and relatively higher economic status tend to place less emphasis on racial group concerns in their evaluations of public policies. |
(10/10/06) |
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Chicago Tribune - "Stress and health -- is there a link?,"* IPR Faculty Fellow Thomas McDade, an anthropologist, is interviewed about his work on minimally-invasive blood-spot samples and how this is providing new insight into the links between stress, health, and social environments. *Registration required. |
9/20/06) |
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WBEZ 91.5 FM Chicago - IPR Faculty Fellow Jennifer Richeson, a social psychologist, talks with Richard Steele about the research that led to her being named a 2006 MacArthur Fellow.
Click here to listen to interview |
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(10/23/05) |
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Chicago Tribune - "Suffering
and resilience; Chicago formula could be used for exiles of
storm." IPR Faculty Fellow Greg
J. Duncan writes in the Chicago Tribune about how
the lessons of Gautreaux in Chicago could serve poor New Orleans
families displaced by Hurricane Katrina. |
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(10/2/05) |
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Chicago Tribune
- "From Extreme Crisis Comes Clarity"
In this Chicago Tribune editorial, IPR Faculty Fellow Jeff
Manza discusses the generosity of Americans in the
face of the Hurricane Katrina disaster and how these voluntary
efforts provide but a tiny fraction of the total amount that
will be needed to recover from the disaster. |
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(9/25/05) |
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The New York Times
- "An Uprooted Underclass, Under the Microscope"
In this article about the possible effects of relocating
New Orleans' displaced poor after Hurricane Katrina, IPR Faculty
Fellow James E. Rosenbaum cites lessons on
relocation from his research on the Gautraux program in Chicago.
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(9/25/05) |
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Chicago Tribune - "Tipping
Scales in Court"
In this Chicago Tribune editorial, John Heinz,
IPR faculty associate and professor of law, points out that
while equality of the law is often proclaimed, in practice
justice for all amounts to justice for those who can afford
it. |
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(9/2/05) |
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The Chronicle of Higher Education
- "Private
Schools Boost Chances of Getting a Degree for Poorly Prepared
Students"
A study by IPR Faculty Fellow James A. Rosenbaum
and graduate student Jennifer L. Stephan indicates that students
who are poorly prepared for college seem to have a higher
chance of completing their degrees if they attend private
colleges or universities. |
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(8/22/05) |
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MSNBC - "Choice
of Childcare Might Affect Children's Development"
According to a study by IPR Faculty Fellow Raquel
Bernal and Michael Keane of Yale University, three-
to six-year-olds of welfare-to-work mothers in informal daycare
arrangements scored lower on cognitive tests compared with
children in formal daycare environments or at home with their
moms. |
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(2/20/05) |
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Chicago Tribune - "Strategy
of Hyperbole Hits Crisis Proportions"
IPR's acting director, Jeff Manza,
discusses the common use of "crisis rhetoric" to
sell political ideas. |
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(1/19/05) |
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"115
FACULTY RECOGNIZED FOR DISTINCTIVE OUTSIDE AWARDS"
President Henry S. Bienen and Provost Lawrence B. Dumas honored
115 faculty members, including seven
IPR faculty members, who have brought distinction
to Northwestern by their important recognition from societies
and agencies outside the University. |
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(4/11/04) |
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Chicago Tribune
- "Society Punishes Ex-convicts for Life"
IPR Faculty Fellows Devah Pager
and Jeff Manza discuss how millions of ex-offenders
are denied the most basic right of citizenship in a democratic
society: the right to vote. |
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(3/17/04) |
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Education Week - "Weaving
Webs"
IPR Faculty Fellow Jim Spillane talks about
his distributed leadership research project, one of the largest
ever conducted on the subject. |
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(2/11/04) |
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Chicago Tribune
- "Professor Leads the Charge on Leadership Studies"
IPR Faculty Fellow Alice Eagly is
interviewed on her research on changes in gender roles and
leadership. |
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(12/9/03) |
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Northwestern News
- "Project
Will Help Exonerated Prisoners"
EVANSTON, Ill -- David Protess -- the Northwestern
University journalism professor whose investigations with
his Medill School of Journalism students have helped free
eight men wrongfully convicted of murder - plans to launch
a pilot project to help exonerated prisoners rebuild their
lives outside of prison. |
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(10/4/03) |
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Los Angeles Times
- "Connerly's Unreal World"
Editorial cites Devah Pager's
research, which found that employers are more apt to interview
and hire white applicants with criminal records over black
applicants without criminal records. She is an assistant professor
of sociology and IPR faculty fellow. |
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(9/28/03) |
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Chicago Tribune
- "Fed up with partisan politics? Welcome back to good
old days"
In his editorial, Jeffery Jenkins, assistant
professor of political science and IPR faculty fellow, makes
the case that the high levels of partisanship we are seeing
in Congress today are nothing new. |
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Chicago Tribune - "Schools
Toying with Test Results"
Bruce Spencer, professor of statistics and
IPR faculty fellow, is quoted in an article discussing how
education officials are using "margin-of-error"
formulas to inflate students' test score results. |
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(9/4/03) |
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The Wall Street Journal -
"Racial Discrimination is Still at Work"
Devah Pager, assistant professor of sociology
and IPR faculty fellow, is interviewed about her findings
that white job applicants were more likely to be interviewed
and hired over black applicants with the same or better qualifications. |
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(9/11/03) |
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The Wall Street Journal
- "Fear of Bias Suits May Be Affecting Hiring Decisions"
In a second article, Devah Pager responds
to a reader's "rational explanation" of this racial
bias in hiring (discrimination suits rather than racial hatred),
noting that such justifications are based on false assumptions. |
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(8/22/03) |
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The Washington Post
- "Solving The Drug Dilemma"
Burton Weisbrod, professor of economics and
IPR faculty fellow, suggests a new economic model for pharmaceutical
pricing and R&D in this editorial. |
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(8/9/03) |
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Chicago Tribune -
"Is workplace better if she's the boss?"
Alice Eagly, professor of psychology and
IPR faculty fellow, was interviewed on her meta-analysis comparing
the transformational, transactional, and laissez-faire leadership
styles of men and women. |
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(7/28/03) |
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WBEZ91.5FM - "Partisanship
and Institutions"
Jeff Jenkins, assistant professor
of political science and IPR faculty fellow, participated
in a discussion on partisanship and institutions. |
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IPR
Administration
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Northwestern
Researcher Named Center for Poverty Research Director
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IPR
and Sociology Department inaugurate Chicago and Urban Studies
Workshop Series
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IPR
Director elected president of Gerotological Society of America
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The
Center for Urban Affairs and Policy Research becomes the Institute
for Policy Research
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Northwestern
University and the University of Chicago bring together leading
researchers in a major new poverty center
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Miscellaneous
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IPR
Launches New Series of Policy Briefs
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Summer
internships for NU undergraduates
(Download program flyer
in PDF format)
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May
5, 2001: IPR Hosts Conference on the Effects of Incarceration
on Children and Families
(Download
conference flyer)
(Download press release)
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May
18, 2001: Conference to Explore U.S. Welfare State in Comparative
Perspective
(Download
conference flyer) |