Inequality and City Size
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Description
Nathaniel Baum-Snow received his Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Chicago in 2005. Baum-Snow has been affiliated with the Population Studies and Training Center at Brown University since 2005. He is also affiliated with Spatial Structures in the Social Sciences (S4) and is a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Baum-Snow is currently working to better understand trends in the spatial distribution of population and employment in U.S. metropolitan areas. In particular, he is investigating the role of transportation infrastructure in the location decisions of firms and households. In addition, he has investigated the role of local public goods such as school quality in determining residential location decisions by race. In addition, in collaboration with Ronni Pavan (University of Rochester), Baum-Snow has completed an NSF grant to study reasons behind urban wage premia.
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Jay S. Kaufman holds a doctorate in epidemiologic science from the University of Michigan. After a post-doctoral position at Loyola Stritch School of Medicine (Chicago, IL), he was Medical Epidemiologist at Carolinas Medical Center (Charlotte, NC). From 1999 through 2008 he held a faculty...
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Mark Hayward received his PhD in Sociology at Indiana University in 1981. Along with his position as Professor of Sociology at the University of Texas, he is Centennial Commission Professor in the Liberal Arts and Director of the Population Research Center. Hayward's primary research interests...
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Barbara Piperata's research applies life history theory and takes a bio-cultural approach in understanding human ecology, reproduction and nutrition. All of her research has been conducted in Latin America, with a particular focus on rural Amazonian populations. Topics of interest include human...
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