“Place” refers to where people live, learn, and/or work, and/or the characteristics thereof. It is often used interchangeably with “geography” and “location” in the poverty studies arena. Common measures of place include urbanicity (urban, exurban, suburban, rural), neighborhood, census tract, and region.
The Impact of COVID-19 in Prisons
- Amanda Klonsky, Michael Everett, John Eason, Danielle Wallace, and Kristin Turney
- Webinar
- November 17 2021
Juan Pedroza on Immigrant Health, Place, and the Pandemic
- Juan Pedroza
- Podcasts
- November 17 2021
Fatherhood During the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Tova Walsh, Darryl Davidson, Shawna Lee, and Derek Miller
- Webinar
- November 04 2021
How have the Working Poor and Working Class Fared since the Great Recession?
- Erica Groshen, Timothy Smeeding, Fenaba Addo, William Darity, Jr., Jasmine Simington, and Jeff Smith
- Webinar
- October 27 2021
Service Deserts and Oases: Evaluating Service Availability for Individuals with Autism
- Fast Focus Policy Brief
- October 15 2021
Mustafa Hussein on the Broader Effects of Local Living Wage Ordinances
- Mustafa Hussein
- Podcasts
- October 04 2021
Addressing Racial Wealth Inequality
- Fenaba Addo, Jacob Faber, and William Darity, Jr.
- Webinar
- July 28 2021
Reforming housing assistance to better respond to recipient needs
- Robert Collinson, Ingrid Gould Ellen, and Jens Ludwig
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- June 2021
Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement 37(1), June 2021
Assessing the Responsiveness of the U.S. Safety Net to the COVID-19 Economic Crisis
- Edited by Emma Caspar, Judith Siers-Poisson, and James T. Spartz
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- June 2021
Jacob Faber on How a New Deal Era Program Shaped America’s Racial Geography
- Jacob Faber
- Podcasts
- February 18 2021