Selection In Utero and Quality of Surviving Males in Historical and Modern Societies
Speaker: Dr. Tim-Allen Bruckner, Assistant Professor of Public Health & Planning, Policy and Design, University of California, Irvine
Speaker: Dr. Tim-Allen Bruckner, Assistant Professor of Public Health & Planning, Policy and Design, University of California, Irvine
The Theory of Change and Response: A New Agenda for Research on Population and Development in Africa Dr. Yves Charbit, Professor Emeritus of Demography, University of Paris, Descartes
Duncan Thomas investigates the inter-relationships between health, human capital and socio-economic status with a focus on the roles that individual, family and community factors play in improving levels of health and well-being across the globe.
Peter serves as a principal investigator for the Russia Longitudinal Monitoring Survey (RLMS), the household panel survey that CPC has been conducting since 1992.
Valerie has ten years of experience working on topics related to migration and poverty dynamics and the consequences of climate variability on household welfare in developing countries.
Rapid population growth in the 1950s, 60s and 70s raised concern about a population explosion with repercussions for the environment, resource depletion and political stability.
Dr. Anastasia Gage is a Professor in the Department of Global Community Health and Behavioral Sciences, Tulane University and holds a Ph.D. in demography.
Professor Flabbi is a labor economist focusing on gender discrimination in labor markets, labor market search and frictions, earnings inequality across skill groups, the role of flexibility on wages, simultaneous marriage and labor market searches, intergenerational mobility, and schooling decisions.
Barrington’s research examines social and structural influences on health and health behaviors, with a focus on HIV prevention and health care among female sex workers, men who have sex with men (MSM), and transgender women in Latin America and Latino migrants in the United States.
Professor Kris Marsh’s general areas of expertise are the black middle class, demography, racial residential segregation, and education.