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    Want out of poverty? Move.

    Want out of poverty? Move.

    September 2, 2014

    State of Opportunity, Michigan Public Radio | Asad L. Asad, Ph.D. candidate in Sociology

    Washington Center for Equitable Growth announces 2018 grantees: Ellora Derenoncourt

    Washington Center for Equitable Growth announces 2018 grantees: Ellora Derenoncourt

    July 25, 2018

    Awardee | Ellora Derenoncourt, PhD candidate in Economics, is one of 12 doctoral student grantees announced today by the Washington Center for Equitable Growth.  Ellora and colleague Claire Montialoux of CREST and UC Berkeley will invetigate how effective basic and universal labor standards are at reducing group inequality in order to increase our understanding of how a higher wage floor and universal federal labor standards can impact the racial and gender wage gaps. 

    View the announcement
    Ellora Derenoncourt website
    Anna Stansbury

    Washington Center for Equitable Growth announces 2019 grantees: Anna Stansbury

    August 26, 2019

    Awardee | Stone PhD Scholar Anna Stansbury, PhD candidate in Economics, is one of 13 doctoral student grantees announced today by the Washington Center for Equitable Growth. Stansbury received a research grant for her work (joint with Gregor Schubert, Harvard PhD candidate in Business Economics), "Getting Labor Markets Right: Occupational Mobility and Outside Options."

    View the announcement ►
    scholar.harvard.edu/stansbury ►
     
    Robert Manduca

    Watch Four Decades of Inequality Drive American Cities Apart

    December 2, 2019

    The New York Times | Research by Robert Manduca, PhD candidate in Sociology & Social Policy, is featured in The Upshot. The articles cited have been published in Social Forces and ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, respectively.

    “'We’ve had this pulling apart of the overall income distribution,” said Robert Manduca, a Ph.D. student in sociology and social policy at Harvard who has found that about half of the economic divergence between different parts of the country is explained by trends in national inequality. “That overall pulling apart has had very different effects in different places, based on which kinds of people were already living in those places.'

    "Mr. Manduca says national policies like reinvigorating antitrust laws would be most effective at reducing inequality (the consolidation of many industries has meant, among other things, that smaller cities that once had company headquarters have lost those jobs, sometimes to big cities)."

    robertmanduca.com ►

    Annual Review of Sociology

    Wealth Inequality and Accumulation

    May 12, 2017

    Annual Review of Sociology | By Alexandra Killewald, Fabian T. Pfeffer, and Jared Schachner. Alexandra Killewald is Professor of Sociology at Harvard. Jared Schachner is a PhD candidate in Sociology and Social Policy.

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