Institution
Urban Institute
Nonprofit•Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States•
About: Urban Institute is a nonprofit organization based out in Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Medicaid & Population. The organization has 927 authors who have published 2330 publications receiving 86426 citations.
Topics: Medicaid, Population, Health care, Poison control, Health policy
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relevance of Johnson's typology of adult intimate partner violence to teen dating violence by replicating it in a sample of youth and found that men were more likely to use violence coupled with controlling behavior as a form of coercion and that more severe type of violence was responsible for the types of female victims feminist researchers had studied in shelter and court populations.
Abstract: In 1995, Johnson proposed a typology of adult intimate partner violence that examined the role of power and control in such relationships and the mutuality of violence between partners. His theory aimed to resolve discrepancies in the adult literature showing gender symmetry in couple violence perpetration found among nationally representative survey samples in contrast to male-dominated violence in studies of shelter, clinical, and criminal justice popu- lations. More specifically, feminist researchers studying help-seeking samples had long posited that violence was a tool used by those in power as a form of control and that intimate partner violence was primarily perpetrated by men. Family violence researchers' findings that high levels of couple violence were in fact perpe- trated by women, based on results from national surveys, conflicted with this belief, prompting Johnson to more closely examine what the field was learning. In doing so, he identified a variety of types of intimate partner violence that varied in nature and form, based on the coexistence of control tactics and physical violence and the reciprocity of perpetration of control and/or violence. These types included situational couple violence, intimate terrorism, violent resistance, and mutual violent control (Johnson, 1999, 2000, 2006, 2008; Johnson & Leone, 2005; Leone, Johnson, Cohan, & Lloyd, 2004). Johnson argued that men were more likely to use violence coupled with controlling behavior as a form of coercion and that this more severe type of violence was responsible for the types of female victims feminist researchers had studied in shelter and court populations. By contrast, the type of couple violence that women in relationships had reported in national surveys was less severe violence without control tactics.This groundbreaking typology caused schol- ars in the field to call into question decades of research about the nature and context of victims' experiences and the appropriateness of victim advocacy and criminal justice responses to inti- mate partner violence when seen as one uni- form phenomenon (Zweig & Burt, 2002). With Johnson's resolution that not all types of cou- ple violence are the same, it became critical to understand the varying needs of victims being targeted by service providers and the nature of perpetrators being processed by law enforce- ment. Had victims been subject to coercive con- trolling behavior in combination with violence? Were perpetrators simply engaging in low-level violence without an element of control? It is important to note that since the development of his theory, Johnson and his colleagues have empirically documented the existence of all of these multiple types of intimate partner violence among adults.The goal of this study was to examine the relevance of Johnson's typology of adult inti- mate partner violence to teen dating violence by replicating it in a sample of youth. The term teen dating violence includes various types and degrees of abuse that can range from physical and sexual violence to forms of emotional abuse occurring between teens who are in dat- ing/romantic relationships with one another (Mulford & Giordano, 2008). Similar to adult intimate partner violence, past research has shown that both male and female youth are victims and perpetrators of dating violence, that some relationships involve violence and abuse that is reciprocal between dating part- ners, and that some relationships involve teen dating violence in which physical violence is coupled with emotional abuse and controlling behaviors (e.g., Mulford & Giordano, 2008). These differing reports of teen dating violence experiences are similar to the ones regarding adult intimate partner violence that prompted Johnson's development of a violence typology.In the current study, we further explored Johnson's typology and its relevance to youth's relationships in terms of reports of violence and controlling behaviors in these relationships. …
40 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present findings from analyses of data on nonresident fathers and child welfare case outcomes for foster children using data available from a telephone survey of child welfare caseworkers, together with administrative data on case outcomes.
40 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss some obstacles managers face in measuring outcomes at the local level, and they offer successful uses of outcomes reporting to address citizen concerns, and discuss the use of outcome reporting in local governments and local private nonprofit organizations.
Abstract: Recent events that have encouraged performance measurement in local governments and local private nonprofit organizations are described in this chapter. The author discusses some obstacles managers face in measuring outcomes at the local level, and he offers successful uses of outcomes reporting to address citizen concerns.
40 citations
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TL;DR: A strong inverse relationship emerges between their initial earnings and their subsequent U.S. earnings growth, which has important implications for the projection of immigrant earnings and emigration in microsimulation models.
Abstract: As the first in a trio of pieces devoted to incorporating immigration into policy models, this article traces the history of research on immigrant earnings. It covers how the earnings trajectories of immigrants differ from those of U.S. natives, how they vary across immigrant groups, and how they have changed over time. The highlighted findings underscore key lessons for modeling immigrant earnings and pave the way for representing the earnings trajectories of immigrants in policy models.
40 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the use of land-based revenues for financing infrastructure can entail substantial fiscal risks, and it is critical to develop ex ante prudential rules comparable to those governing borrowing, to reduce fiscal risks and the contingent liabilities associated with the land based revenues for infrastructure investment.
Abstract: Land assets have become an important source of financing capital investments by subnational governments in developing countries. Land assets, often with billions of dollars per transaction, rival and sometimes surpass subnational borrowing or fiscal transfers for capital spending. While reducing the uncertainty surrounding future debt repayment capacity, the use of land-based revenues for financing infrastructure can entail substantial fiscal risks. Land sales often involve less transparency than borrowing. Many sales are conducted off-budget, which makes it easier to divert proceeds into operating budgets. Capital revenues from sales of land assets exert a much more volatile trend and could create an incentive to appropriate auction proceeds for financing the operating budget, particularly in times of budget shortfalls during economic downturns. Furthermore, land collateral and expected future land-value appreciation for bank loans can be linked with macroeconomic risks. It is critical to develop ex ante prudential rules comparable to those governing borrowing, to reduce fiscal risks and the contingent liabilities associated with the land-based revenues for financing infrastructure.
40 citations
Authors
Showing all 937 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Jun Yang | 107 | 2090 | 55257 |
Jesse A. Berlin | 103 | 331 | 64187 |
Joseph P. Newhouse | 101 | 484 | 47711 |
Ted R. Miller | 97 | 384 | 116530 |
Peng Gong | 95 | 525 | 32283 |
James Evans | 69 | 659 | 23585 |
Mark Baker | 65 | 382 | 20285 |
Erik Swyngedouw | 64 | 344 | 23494 |
Richard V. Burkhauser | 63 | 347 | 13059 |
Philip J. Held | 62 | 113 | 21596 |
George Galster | 60 | 226 | 13037 |
Laurence C. Baker | 57 | 211 | 11985 |
Richard Heeks | 56 | 281 | 15660 |
Sandra L. Hofferth | 54 | 163 | 12382 |
Kristin A. Moore | 54 | 265 | 9270 |