journal
Journals Social Forces; a Scientific Me...

Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation

https://read.qxmd.com/read/35965992/hard-times-routine-schedule-unpredictability-and-material-hardship-among-service-sector-workers
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Schneider, Kristen Harknett
American policymakers have long focused on work as a key means to improve economic wellbeing. Yet, work has become increasingly precarious and polarized. This precarity is manifest in low wages, but also in unstable and unpredictable work schedules that often vary significantly week-to-week with little advance notice. We draw on new survey data from The Shift Project on 37,263 hourly retail and food service workers in the United States. We assess the association between routine unpredictability in work schedules and household material hardship...
June 2021: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33867870/racialized-discourse-in-seattle-rental-ad-texts
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ian Kennedy, Chris Hess, Amandalynne Paullada, Sarah Chasins
Racial discrimination has been a central driver of residential segregation for many decades, in the Seattle area as well as in the United States as a whole. In addition to redlining and restrictive housing covenants, housing advertisements included explicit racial language until 1968. Since then, housing patterns have remained racialized, despite overt forms of racial language and discrimination becoming less prevalent. In this paper, we use Structural Topic Models (STM) and qualitative analysis to investigate how contemporary rental listings from the Seattle-Tacoma Craigslist page differ in their description based on neighborhood racial composition...
June 2021: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33462540/does-the-transition-to-grandparenthood-deter-gray-divorce-a-test-of-the-braking-hypothesis
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susan L Brown, I-Fen Lin, Kagan A Mellencamp
The gray divorce rate, which describes divorce among individuals aged 50 and older, has doubled since 1990. Extending prior research that showed the transition to parenthood has a "braking effect" on divorce, we examined whether the transition to grandparenthood, an emotionally meaningful midlife event that typically renews midlife marriages, exerts an analogous "braking effect" on gray divorce. Using panel data from the 1998-2014 Health and Retirement Study, we found that becoming biological grandparents has a large deterrent effect on gray divorce that persists even after accounting for a host of other factors known to be associated with divorce...
March 2021: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32792750/motherhood-wage-penalties-in-latin-america-the-significance-of-labor-informality
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aida Villanueva, Ken-Hou Lin
revious research has established the presence of a motherhood wage penalty in many developed societies; however, whether mothers face similar disadvantages in developing countries remains underexplored. This article argues that different intervening factors emerge when considering mothers' labor compensation in developing contexts. Labor informality, a key characteristic of labor markets in developing countries, could play a significant role in shaping the wage consequence of motherhood. Using microdata from 43 national household surveys conducted between 2000 and 2017, we analyze five Latin American countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Peru...
August 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34017149/unpacking-the-drivers-of-racial-disparities-in-school-suspension-and-expulsion
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jayanti Owens, Sara S McLanahan
School suspension and expulsion are important forms of punishment that disproportionately affect Black students, with long-term consequences for educational attainment and other indicators of wellbeing. Prior research identifies three mechanisms that help account for racial disparities in suspension and expulsion: between-school sorting, differences in student behaviors, and differences in the treatment and support of students with similar behaviors. We extend this literature by (1) comparing the contributions of these three mechanisms in a single study, (2) assessing behavior and school composition when children enter kindergarten and before most are exposed to school discipline, and (3) using both teacher and parent reports of student behaviors...
June 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32655192/the-endogeneity-of-race-black-racial-identification-and-men-s-earnings-in-mexico
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrés Villarreal, Stanley R Bailey
A growing body of sociological research has shown that racial identification is not only fluid, but crucially depends on other individual- and societal-level factors. When such factors are also associated with socioeconomic outcomes such as earnings, estimates of the disadvantage experienced by individuals because of how they identify racially obtained from standard regression models may be biased. We illustrate this potential bias using data from a large-scale survey conducted by the Mexican census bureau...
June 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32595238/decline-of-the-american-dream-outlook-toward-the-future-across-three-generations-of-midwest-families
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeylan T Mortimer, Arnaldo Mont'Alvao, Pamela Aronson
Expansion of higher education and long-term economic growth have fostered high aspirations among adolescents. Recently, however, deteriorating labor force opportunities, particularly since the "Great Recession," and rising inequality have challenged the "American Dream." To assess how parental and adolescent outlooks have evolved over time, we examine shifts in future orientations across three generations of Midwest American families. Our unique data archive from the Youth Development Study includes 266 Generation 1 and Generation 2 parent-child dyads and 422 Generation 3 children...
June 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34290456/why-who-marries-whom-matters-effects-of-educational-assortative-mating-on-infant-health-in-the-u-s-1969-1994
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily Rauscher
Educational assortative mating patterns in the U.S. have changed since the 1960s, but we know little about the effects of these patterns on children, particularly on infant health. Rising educational homogamy may alter prenatal contexts through parental stress and resources, with implications for inequality. Using 1969-1994 NVSS birth data and aggregate cohort-state census measures of spousal similarity of education and labor force participation as instrumental variables (IV), this study estimates effects of parental educational similarity on infant health...
March 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34262230/the-social-production-and-salience-of-young-women-s-desire-for-sex
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abigail Weitzman
Using data from the Relationship Dynamics and Social Life Study, a diverse sample of 925 women updated weekly for 2.5 years, I (1) describe how desire for sex varies across and within women during the transition to adulthood; (2) explore how desire corresponds with women's social circumstances and experiences; and (3) assess the relationship between desire for sex, sexual activity, and contraceptive use. The strength of young women's desire is heterogeneous across key demographic characteristics like religiosity and social class; changes after pivotal events like sexual debut; and varies with social ecology, such as friends' attitudes...
March 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33981122/unrealized-educational-expectations-and-mental-health-evidence-from-a-low-income-country
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily Smith-Greenaway, Sara Yeatman
The rapid expansion of schooling across low-income countries, combined with intensive governmental and nongovernmental efforts to promote education, has encouraged youth in these contexts to form exceptionally high educational expectations, despite immense structural barriers to achieving them. Consequently, many young people's educational expectations go unmet, driving concerns over the possible unintended consequences, including their elevated risk of mental health problems. At the same time, role transitions (e...
March 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33840864/worker-power-and-class-polarization-in-intra-year-work-hour-volatility
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joe LaBriola, Daniel Schneider
Precarious work, which has become more prevalent in the United States in recent decades, is disproportionately experienced by workers of lower socioeconomic classes, and research suggests that the erosion of worker power has contributed to this class polarization in precarity. One dimension of precarious work of growing interest to scholars and policymakers is instability faced by workers in the amount and regularity of their work hours. However, we know little about the magnitude of month-to-month or week-to-week (intra-year) volatility in hours worked, the extent of class-based polarization in this measure of job quality, and whether worker power moderates this polarization...
March 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32095028/when-worlds-collide-linking-involvement-with-friends-and-intimate-partner-violence-in-young-adulthood
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peggy C Giordano, Jennifer E Copp, Wendy D Manning, Monica A Longmore
Recent increases in the average age at first marriage have created an extended period during which young adults frequently continue to socialize with friends, even as romantic ties typically become increasingly serious. Nevertheless, little research has focused on some of the challenges associated with navigating these two social worlds simultaneously. The current study expanded the traditional lens of social learning theory to investigate associations between a range of attitudes and behaviors of friends and a serious form of conflict-intimate partner violence (IPV)...
March 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32076352/are-parental-relationships-improved-if-fathers-take-time-off-of-work-after-the-birth-of-a-child
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard J Petts, Chris Knoester
Research has begun to examine the consequences of paternity leave, focusing primarily on whether paternity leave-taking increases father involvement. Yet, other consequences of paternity leave-taking have not been considered using U.S data. This study uses longitudinal data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study to examine whether fathers' time off from work after the birth of a child is associated with relationship quality, relationship support, and coparenting quality. We also consider whether these relationships are mediated by father involvement...
March 2020: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31354175/childless-expectations-and-childlessness-over-the-life-course
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Rybińska, S Philip Morgan
Using nineteen panels of the 1979 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY-79), we construct life-lines characterizing women's childless expectations and fertility behavior. One-quarter of women in the NLSY-79 cohort ever reported an expectation for childlessness but only 14.8 percent of women remain childless. Childless women follow two predominant life course paths: (1) repeated postponement of childbearing and the subsequent adoption of a childless expectation at older ages or (2) indecision about parenthood signaled through vacillating reports of childless expectations across various ages...
June 2019: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31190688/does-it-take-a-village-kin-coresidence-and-child-survival-in-tanzania
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren Gaydosh
Children in Tanzania live in a variety of family structures, many of which contain related and unrelated non-parental adults. In this article, I use data from the Rufiji Health and Demographic Surveillance System in Tanzania to examine the role of coresident non-parental adults in childrearing. First, I use quantitative demographic data to investigate the association between kin coresidence and child survival, differentiating by lineage. I also examine the role of unrelated coresident adults. Second, I test whether coresident non-parental adults moderate the association between parental absence and child survival...
June 2019: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32606481/marriage-cohabitation-and-sexual-exclusivity-unpacking-the-effect-of-marriage
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brandon G Wagner
Sexual concurrency, or having temporally overlapping sexual partnerships, has important consequences for relationship quality and individual health, as well as the health and wellbeing of others embedded in larger sexual networks. Although married and cohabiting couples have similar, almost universal expectations of sexual exclusivity, the former report significantly lower rates of engaging in sexual concurrency than the latter. Given this difference in behavior occurs despite similar expectations of sexual fidelity, sexual exclusivity can provide an important test of whether marriage has a causal effect on relationship behavior...
March 2019: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31258199/punishment-and-inequality-at-an-early-age-exclusionary-discipline-in-elementary-school
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wade C Jacobsen, Garrett T Pace, Nayan G Ramirez
We advance current knowledge of school punishment by examining (1) the prevalence of exclusionary discipline in elementary school, (2) racial disparities in exclusionary discipline in elementary school, and (3) the association between exclusionary discipline and aggressive behavior in elementary school. Using child and parent reports from the Fragile Families Study, we estimate that more than 1 in 10 children born 1998-2000 in large US cities were suspended or expelled by age nine, when most were in third grade...
March 2019: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33487761/the-effects-of-active-and-passive-leisure-on-cognition-in-children-evidence-from-exogenous-variation-in-weather
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Laidley, Dalton Conley
Leisure time activity is often positioned as a key factor in child development, yet we know relatively little about the causal significance of various specific activities or the magnitude of their effects. Here, we couple individual fixed effects and instrumental variable approaches in trying to determine whether specific forms of leisure contribute to gains in test performance over time. We merge a restricted access version of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) Child Development Supplement (CDS), longitudinally collected from 1997 to 2007, with a database of over three million county-day observations of sunlight...
September 2018: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30573927/generations-of-advantage-multigenerational-correlations-in-family-wealth
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fabian T Pfeffer, Alexandra Killewald
Inequality in family wealth is high, yet we know little about how much and how wealth inequality is maintained across generations. We argue that a long-term perspective reflective of wealth's cumulative nature is crucial to understand the extent and channels of wealth reproduction across generations. Using data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics that span nearly half a century, we show that a one-decile increase in parents' wealth position is associated with an increase of about four percentiles in their offspring's wealth position in adulthood...
June 2018: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31186591/a-dynamic-model-of-self-employment-and-socioeconomic-mobility-among-return-migrants-the-case-of-urban-mexico
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joshua Thomas Wassink, Jaqueline Maria Hagan
Return migrants engage in high rates of self-employment, which scholars commonly attribute to the accumulation of financial and human capital while working abroad. Central to this scholarship is the assumption that self-employment is positive and leads to upward economic mobility among return migrants. This scholarship is limited, however, because it relies on large surveys and cross-sectional census data that treat self-employment as a single uni-dimensional status measured at one point in time. To improve conceptualization and measurement of self- employment, we engage three bodies of research that have thus far had little cross-fertilization: the literature on work and self-employment in Latin America, the scholarship on return migration and self-employment, and developments in economic theories of international migration...
March 2018: Social Forces; a Scientific Medium of Social Study and Interpretation
journal
journal
34544
2
3
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.