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
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01 Jan 1983
57 citations
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01 Jan 2006TL;DR: This article examined teacher retention patterns in the state of California using a new longitudinal database on public school teachers, and investigated the effects on retention of two policies intended to improve retention (teacher induction programs and teacher compensation), as well as the unintended consequences of class-size reduction programs.
Abstract: In California's continuing efforts to improve the quality of public schools, teacher retention is a potentially important strategy. Using a new longitudinal database on public school teachers, the authors examine teacher retention patterns in the state. They investigate the effects on retention of two policies intended to improve retention (teacher induction programs and teacher compensation), as well as the unintended consequences of class-size reduction programs. They also consider the relationship between teacher retention and the shortage of fully credentialed teachers, with a particular focus on high-poverty districts, where the shortage is most severe. (Public Policy Institute of California, February 2006.)
57 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 Cohort Mother-Child files to explore the idea that child well-being can be improved by encouraging and enhancing parental marriage.
Abstract: This article uses data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 Cohort Mother-Child files to explore the idea that child well-being can be improved by encouraging and enhancing parental marriage. I consider how children's living arrangements, the stability of parental marriages, and changes in living arrangements are related to children's behavior and cognitive test scores. Although there is some evidence that children living with their married parents, even parents in unstable marriages, have better outcomes than children living in certain nonmarital arrangements, the findings vary across domains and specifications, and the effect sizes are generally small. Thus, any benefits of policies aimed improving child well-being by encouraging and enhancing parental marriage are likely to be modest at best. Key Words: children, family policy, family structure, living arrangements, marriage, well-being. Conventional wisdom and considerable social science research hold that children who live with their married biological or adoptive parents fare better on a host of indicators and outcomes man children in any other living arrangement (e.g., McLanahan & Sandefur, 1994). In public policy circles, this convergence of ideology and research has given momentum to the marriage movement, policymakers, and advocates who believe that government should actively support "healthy" marriages. Indeed, under the Bush Administration's Healthy Marriage Initiative, the federal government will spend $150 million a year on research, policies, and programs aimed at promoting healthy marriages. The ultimate success of this translation of research findings to policy prescriptions depends on the answers to two key questions. First, if marriage promotion efforts are successful, children who otherwise would live in an alternative arrangement will live with married parents. Can one reasonably expect that children living in families formed as a result of marriage promotion will fare as well as their counterparts living with married parents today? second, for some children, moving into a married family represents a disruption in their living arrangement and perhaps a change in residence or the introduction of a stepparent, or both. Do such transitions have negative consequences for children that may offset some of the benefits of marriage? This article examines how the relationships between children's well-being and their living arrangements are affected by the stability of their parents' marriages and changes in their living arrangements using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 (NLSY-79) Cohort Mother-Child files. These data are ideal for this investigation because they contain detailed measures of child well-being, living arrangements, and other socioeconomic information, and these factors are measured at several points in time. The key innovation introduced here is using the future marital status of a child's mother to measure the stability of the relationship between married parents, and stability can be considered a proxy for marital quality. The home environment for children whose parents ultimately separate and divorce is likely to be of lower quality than that of children whose parents remain married. Including this measure of adult relationship stability helps to account for the possibility that children in marriage-promoted families may be in lower quality home environments than the average child with married parents today. Background A substantial amount of research exists on the relationship between living arrangements and children's well-being. The research considers a wide variety of outcomes for children across several different domains and explores different mechanisms by which living arrangements can affect these outcomes. Children's outcomes can be broadly grouped into three domains: cognitive, school based, and behavioral. Cognitive outcomes are usually measured by test scores (e. …
57 citations
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TL;DR: This article examined how four key provisions in immigration law, far from creating conditions for immigrant families to reunite, contribute to keeping families apart, and found evidence consistent with the premise that immigration laws affect the formation, composition, and structure of immigrant families with potential long-term consequences.
Abstract: It is increasingly recognized that immigration laws affect immigrants' integration. Most recently there has been growing attention to how immigration enforcement affects families through forced separations caused by deportations and long-term family separations across national borders stemming from unauthorized entry to the United States. However, beyond enforcement, there has been little systematic account of how other provisions of immigration law contribute to family separations. In this article we examine how four key provisions in immigration law, far from creating conditions for immigrant families to reunite, contribute to keeping families apart. As such, these provisions shape, in fundamental ways, the structure and composition of immigrant families. Relying on data from the American Community Survey and ethnographic interviews in Phoenix, Arizona, we find evidence consistent with the premise that immigration laws affect the formation, composition, and structure of immigrant families with potential long-term consequences.
57 citations
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TL;DR: The IRS Form 990 is the best source of data for researchers, as filing is legally required for most nonprofits as discussed by the authors, except those with less than $25,000 in gross receipts and religious congregations or related organizations.
Abstract: Better information on the nonprofit sector in the United States is needed to help answer questions about the impact and accountability of nonprofits. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 990 is the best source of data for researchers, as filing is legally required for most nonprofits. Major exceptions are those with less than $25,000 in gross receipts and religious congregations or related organizations. All private foundations must file a Form 990-PF annually regardless of size. This article describes the current IRS data sources and details their strengths and limitations for different research purposes. Additional data needed to illuminate gaps in knowledge are noted, along with recommendations for future research. These include improving financial accounting for nonprofits and standardizing data definitions and reporting formats. Only with accurate and reliable data can research help inform decision making and lead to increased effectiveness within the nonprofit sector.
56 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 |