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Family and Parents

 

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Gregory AcsLaudan Y. AronRobert I. Lerman
Jennifer Ehrle MacomberMargaret SimmsElaine Sorensen
Laura Wheaton

 

Publications on Family/Parents

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Five Questions For Mary Cunningham (Five Questions)
Mary K. Cunningham

Mary Cunningham, author of "Preventing and Ending Homelessness—Next Steps," answers five questions about how to combat homelessness. Evidence-based approaches have cut homelessness among chronically homeless single adults and new strategies are now being adopted to help homeless families. Investing in proven strategies is crucial as the economic crisis puts more people at risk of ending up in shelters and threatens to reverse the progress communities have made toward ending and preventing homelessness.

Posted to Web: April 22, 2009Publication Date: April 22, 2009

Susan Popkin to Head the Urban Institute's New Program on Neighborhoods and Youth Development (Press Release)
The Urban Institute

Susan Popkin, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute and an expert on public housing, has been named the director of the Institute’s new Program on Neighborhoods and Youth Development.

Posted to Web: April 22, 2009Publication Date: April 22, 2009

Employers' Perspectives on San Francisco's Paid Sick Leave Policy (Research Report)
Shelley Waters Boots, Karin Martinson, Anna Danziger

This report summarizes strategies San Francisco employers used to implement the nation's first law requiring paid sick days for all employees, based on interviews with a sample of businesses. Although employers faced three new policies that affected staff wages and benefits, they were able to implement the paid sick leave requirement with minimal impacts to their business. The report details employer responses to the law in their operations, staffing, employee benefit packages, and reporting requirements. By assessing employers' perspectives on the operational challenges of the law, the study provides lessons to inform future research and policymaking.

Posted to Web: April 21, 2009Publication Date: March 31, 2009

Thursday's Child: Kids, Families, and Tax Policy: Best Friends Forever? (Audio Podcasts / Thursday's Child)
The Urban Institute

For many concerned about the well-being of children and families -- whether they're program managers, service providers, advocates, policymakers, or policy watchers -- tax policy is terra incognita, a distant, tangled domain best left unexplored. But tax policy has become a powerful partner to government spending over the past two decades. The recent economic stimulus package included many tax provisions focused on children and families and President Obama's proposed fiscal 2010 budget promises more.

Posted to Web: April 16, 2009Publication Date: April 16, 2009

The Impact of Marital and Relationship Status on Social Outcomes for Returning Prisoners (Research Report)
Christy Visher, Carly Knight, Aaron Chalfin, John Roman

While a large body of empirical research indicates that marriage is associated with criminal activity, to date little research exists on the effects of relationship status on a population of offenders returning to their communities. This study uses data on over 650 former prisoners to examine the impact of relationships on recidivism, substance use, and employment during this critical period of re-entry. Findings suggest that marriage cut the odds of recidivism and drug use in half when compared to those in casual relationships.

Posted to Web: April 14, 2009Publication Date: February 18, 2009

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