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Paul A. Jargowsky, Ph. D. - CALDER Center CV.pdf · 2002 Kristine A. Lykens and Paul A. Jargowsky,...
Transcript of Paul A. Jargowsky, Ph. D. - CALDER Center CV.pdf · 2002 Kristine A. Lykens and Paul A. Jargowsky,...
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Paul A. Jargowsky, Ph. D.
Rutgers University – Camden Voice: 856-225-2729
Center for Urban Research and Education Fax: 856-225-6785
321 N. Cooper St. email: [email protected]
Camden NJ 08102 http://jargowsky.rutgers.edu
http://cure.camden.rutgers.edu/
EDUCATION
1991 Ph.D. in Public Policy, Harvard University. Dissertation Committee: Mary Jo
Bane, David T. Ellwood, Paul E. Peterson. Dissertation: Ghetto Poverty: The
Neighborhood Distribution Framework.
1986 Master in Public Policy, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard
University. Policy Analysis Exercise (with Mark X. Cronin), “Child Support in
New York State: Making the System Work.” Prepared for the New York State
Department of Social Services.
1980 A.B., Princeton University, Philosophy, magna cum laude. Senior Thesis: Free
Will and Determinism: A Study of Two Conflicting Points of View. Advisor:
Thomas Nagel.
ACADEMIC POSITIONS
2011-present Professor of Public Policy and Director, Center for Urban Research and
Education (CURE), Rutgers University – Camden.
2010-2011 Program Head, Public Policy and Political Economy Program, University of
Texas at Dallas (UTD).
2007-2011 Professor of Public Policy, School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences,
UTD.
Spring 2009 Visiting Scholar, Urban Institute, Washington DC.
2003-2008 Director, Texas Schools Project at UTD, an ongoing multi-year panel study of
elementary, secondary, and higher education in Texas.
2002-2008 Director, Bruton Center for Development Studies, UTD.
Fall 2004 Visiting Scholar, Centre de Sciences Humaines, Cultural Section of the French
Embassy, New Delhi, India.
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1997-2007 Associate Professor of Political Economy, UTD.
1997-1998 Visiting Associate Professor, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard
University.
1991-1997 Assistant Professor of Political Economy, UTD.
Summer 1993 Visiting Scholar, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Planning and Evaluation,
Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, D.C.
1987-1991 Teaching Fellow, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
PUBLICATIONS (Sole-authored unless noted)
Books, Reports, and Monographs
2013 Concentration of Poverty in the New Millennium: Changes in Prevalence,
Composition, and Location of High-Poverty Neighborhoods. The Century
Foundation, New York, and the Center for Urban Research and Education,
Rutgers-Camden, December 2013. [http://tcf.org/bookstore/detail/concentration-
of-poverty-in-the-new-millennium]
2010 Karina Fortuny, Ajay Chaudry, and Paul Jargowsky, “Immigration Trends in
Metropolitan America, 1980–2007,” Immigration and Neighborhood Change,
Brief #1. Washington DC, The Urban Institute, December 2010.
[http://www.urban.org/publications/412273.html]
2009 Paul A. Jargowsky and Todd Swanstrom. Economic Integration: Why It Matters
and How Cities Can Get More of It. Chicago, Illinois: CEOs for Cities, City
Vitals Series. [http://www.ceosforcities.org/pagefiles/EconomicIntegration.pdf]
2006 Paul A. Jargowsky and Isabelle Sawhill. “The Decline of the Underclass.”
Policy Brief #36, Center on Children and Families. Washington DC: The
Brookings Institution.
[http://www.brookings.edu/research/papers/2006/01/01poverty-jargowsky]
2003 Stunning Progress, Hidden Problems: The Dramatic Decline of Concentrated
Poverty in the 1990s. Living Cities Census Series, Center on Urban and
Metropolitan Studies. Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution, May 2003.
[http://www.brookings.edu/research/reports/2003/05/demographics-jargowsky]
1997 Poverty and Place: Ghettos, Barrios, and the American City. New York: Russell
Sage Foundation. With an Introduction by William Julius Wilson. (Issued in
paperback, 1998.)
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Refereed Articles and Book Chapters
2014 “Segregation, Neighborhoods, and Schools.” Pp. 97-136 in Annette Lareau and
Kimberly Goyette, eds., Choosing Homes, Choosing Schools: Residential
Segregation and the Search for a Good School. New York: Russell Sage
Foundation.
2014 Paul A. Jargowsky and Lorraine C. Minnite. “The Underclass.” In James D.
Wright, ed., International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences,
2nd ed. Oxford: Elsevier, forthcoming.
2011 “Urban Poverty, Economic Segregation, and Urban Policy.” In Nancy Brooks,
Kieran Donaghy, and Gerritt Knaap, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Urban
Economics and Planning. New York: Oxford University Press.
2011 Paul A. Jargowsky and Mohamed El Komi. “Before or After the Bell: School
Context and Neighborhood Effects on Student Achievement.” Pp. 50-72 in
Harriet Newburger, Eugénie L. Birch and Susan M. Wachter, eds., Neighborhood
and Life Chances: How Place Matters in Modern America. Philadelphia:
Philadelphia Federal Reserve Board and Penn Institute for Urban Research.
2009 “Immigrants and Neighborhoods of Concentrated Poverty: Assimilation or
Stagnation?” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Vol. 35, pp. 1129-1151.
2009 Paul A. Jargowsky and Jeongdai Kim, “The Information Theory of Segregation:
Uniting Segregation and Inequality in a Common Framework.” Research on
Economic Inequality, Vol. 17, pp. 3-31.
2009 Paul A. Jargowsky and Yoonhwan Park, “Cause or Consequence?
Suburbanization and Crime in U.S Metropolitan Areas.” Crime and
Delinquency, Vol. 55, No. 1, pp. 28-50.
2009 Jeongdai Kim and Paul A. Jargowsky, “The GINI Coefficient and Segregation on
a Continuous Variable.” Research on Economic Inequality, Vol. 17, pp. 57-70.
2006 Paul A. Jargowsky and Rebecca Yang, “The ‘Underclass’ Revisited: A Social
Problem in Decline.” Journal of Urban Affairs, Vol. 28, No. 1, pp. 55-70.
2006 Rebecca Yang and Paul A. Jargowsky, “Suburban Development and Economic
Segregation in the 1990s.” Journal of Urban Affairs, Vol. 28, No. 3, pp. 253-
273.
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2005 “Stunning Progress, Hidden Problems: The Dramatic Decline of Concentrated
Poverty in the 1990s.” Pp. 137-171 in Alan Berube, Bruce Katz and Robert
Lang, eds., Redefining Urban and Suburban America: Evidence from Census
2000, Vol. 2. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.
2005 “Chaos or Community: Directions for Public Policy.” Pp. 233-251 in Nancy
Kleniewski, ed. 2005. Cities and society (Blackwell Readers in Sociology).
Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell.
2005 “The Ecological Fallacy.” Pp. 715-722 in Kimberly Kempf-Leonard, ed., The
Encyclopedia of Social Measurement, Vol. 1. San Diego, California: Academic
Press.
2005 “Omitted Variable Bias.” Pp. 919-924 in Kimberly Kempf-Leonard, ed., The
Encyclopedia of Social Measurement, Vol. 2. San Diego, California: Academic
Press.
2005 Paul A. Jargowsky, Robert Crutchfield, and Scott Desmond, “Is Suburban
Sprawl a Juvenile Justice Issue?” Pp. 167-201 in Darnell Hawkins and Kimberly
Kempf-Leonard, eds., Our Children, Their Children: Confronting Race and
Ethnic Differences in American Criminal Justice. Chicago: the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
2005 Paul A. Jargowsky and Rui Yang, “Descriptive and Inferential Statistics.” Pp.
659-658 in Kimberly Kempf-Leonard, ed., The Encyclopedia of Social
Measurement, Vol. 1. San Diego, California: Academic Press.
2002 “Sprawl, Concentration of Poverty, and Urban Inequality.” Pp. 39-72 in Gregory
Squires, ed., Urban Sprawl: Causes, Consequences, and Policy Responses.
Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute Press.
2002 Kristine A. Lykens and Paul A. Jargowsky, “Medicaid Matters: Children’s
Health and Medicaid Eligibility Expansions.” Journal of Policy Analysis and
Management, Vol. 21, pp. 219-238.
1998 “Urban Poverty, Race, and the Central City: The ‘Bitter Fruit’ of 30 Years of
Neglect.” In The Millennium Breach: Richer, Poorer and Racially Apart -- A
Thirty Year Update of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (the
“Kerner Report”). Washington, D.C.: The Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation and
the Corporation for What Works, 1998. Reprinted in Fred R. Harris, ed., Locked
in the Poorhouse: Cities, Race, and Poverty in the United States (Lanham, MD:
Rowman and Littlefield, 1998).
1997 “Metropolitan Restructuring: Implications for Urban Policy.” Stanford Law and
Policy Review Vol. 8, pp. 47-60.
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1996 “Take the Money and Run: Economic Segregation in U.S. Metropolitan Areas.”
American Sociological Review, Vol. 61, pp. 984-998.
1996 “Beyond the Street Corner: The Hidden Diversity of High-Poverty
Neighborhoods.” Urban Geography, Vol. 17, pp. 579-603.
1995 Take the Money and Run: Economic Segregation in U.S. Metropolitan Areas.
Discussion Paper No. 1056-95 (January, 1995). Madison, Wisconsin: Institute
for Research on Poverty. [http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/irp. Includes a technical
appendix not included in American Sociological Review version.]
1994 “Ghetto Poverty among Blacks in the 1980s.” Journal of Policy Analysis and
Management, Vol. 13, pp. 288-310.
1991 Paul A. Jargowsky and Mary Jo Bane, “Ghetto Poverty in the United States,
1970-1980.” Pp. 235-273 in Christopher Jencks and Paul E. Peterson, eds., The
Urban Underclass. Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution.
1990 Paul A. Jargowsky and Mary Jo Bane, “Ghetto Poverty: Basic Questions.” Pp.
16-67 in Laurence E. Lynn, Jr. and Michael T. McGeary, eds., Inner-City
Poverty in the United States. Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences
Press.
1990 Amitai Etzioni and Paul A. Jargowsky, “The False Choice between High
Technology and Basic Industry.” Pp. 304-318 in Kai Erikson and Steven Peter
Vallas, eds., The Nature of Work: Sociological Perspectives. New Haven,
Connecticut: Yale University Press.
1988 Mary Jo Bane and Paul A. Jargowsky, “The Impact of Government Policy on
Family Structure.” Pp. 219-261 in Andrew Cherlin, ed., The Changing American
Family and Public Policy. Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute Press.
1988 Mary Jo Bane and Paul A. Jargowsky, “A New Framework for Democratic
Poverty Policy.” Pp. 368-379 in Robert Levin, ed., Turning Points: Democratic
Blueprints for the Future. New York: Hippocrene Books, Inc.
1984 Amitai Etzioni and Paul A. Jargowsky, “High Technology, Basic Industry, and
the Future of the American Economy.” Human Resources Management, Vol. 23,
pp. 229-240.
Book Reviews, Op-Eds, and Other Non-refereed Publications
2013 Review of Ray Hutchison and Bruce D. Haynes (Eds.), “The Ghetto:
Contemporary Global Issues and Controversies.” Journal of Urban Affairs, Vol.
35, No. 5, pp. 651-653.
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2013 Marie Isabelle Chevrier and Paul A. Jargowsky, “A prescription for ending the
war crimes.” The Courier Post, September 12, 2013. Reprinted as “Time to
Stop the War Crimes.” The Huffington Post. September 12, 2013.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marie-isabelle-chevrier/time-to-stop-the-war-
crim_b_3914465.html
2013 “Disinvestment.” In Cyril Reade, ed., Visions of Camden Exhibition at the
Rutgers-Camden Stedman Gallery, January 14-March 1, 2013.
2012 “Attractions work, but haven't saved Camden.” The Courier Post, December 23.
2012 “Race is still leading line of demarcation.” The Courier Post, December 12.
2012 “Region Best Served by Preserving Rutgers,” The Courier Post, April 24.
Reprinted as “Why Rutgers-Rowan Merger Would Fail,” The Atlantic City Press,
April 27, 2012.
2010 Review of More than Just Race: Being Black and Poor in the Inner City, by
William Julius Wilson. City and Community, Vol. 9, pp. 225-226.
2009 “Comment on Robert Hutchens, ‘Occupational Segregation with Economic
Disadvantage: An Investigation Using Decomposable Indexes’.” Research on
Economic Inequality, Vol. 17, pp. 121-124.
2008 “Immigrants and Neighborhoods of Concentrated Poverty: Assimilation or
Stagnation?” Poverty Research Flash, July-August 2008
2005 “Response to George Galster, ‘Unexpected Consequences from the Reduction in
Poverty’.” Economic Development Quarterly, Vol. 19, No. 2, pp. 133-135.
2005 “Comparative Metropolitan Development.” Pp. 21-37 in Véronique Dupont, ed.,
Peri-Urban Dynamics: Population, Habitat and Environment on the Peripheries
of Large Indian Metropolises: A Review of Concepts and General Issues. Centre
de Sciences Humaines Occasional Paper No. 14 (December 2005).
2004 “Die Metropolitanen Gebiete der USA: Strukturwandel und Stadtpolitik.” Pp.
122-147 in Hartmut Häußermann; Martin Kronauer; Walter Siebel (eds.), An den
Raenderner Staedte: Armut and Ausgrenzung. Frankfurt: Suhrkamp.
2003 “Concentration of Poverty Declines in the 1990s,” Poverty and Race Research
Action Council, Vol. 12, No. 4 (July/August), pp. 1-2.
2002 “Disrupting my dinner has a price,” The Dallas Morning News, March 20, 2002,
p. 23A.
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2001 Comparative review essay of four books from the Multi-City Study of Urban
Inequality (MCSUI): The Atlanta Paradox, edited by D. Sjoquist; Detroit
Divided, by R. Farley et al.; The Boston Renaissance, by Barry Bluestone and
Mary Huff Stevenson; and Prismatic Metropolis, edited by L. D. Bobo, et al.,
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 20, pp. 581-588.
2001 Review of Place Matters: Metropolitics for the Twenty-First Century, by Peter
Drier, John Mollenkopf, and Todd Swanstrom (Lawrence, Kansas: University of
Kansas Press, 2001), Urban Affairs Review.
2000 Review of Who’s Not Working and Why, by Richard Pryor and David Schaffer.
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 19, pp. 169-171.
2000 “Public Housing Sale Raises Larger Issues,” The Ft. Worth Star-Telegram,
February 27, 2000, p. 1M.
1999 “High Court Should Reverse Housing Ruling,” The Dallas Morning News,
March 29, 1999, p. 11A.
1999 Review of The Unknown City: The Lives of Poor and Working-Class Young
Adults, by Michelle Fine and Lois Weis. American Journal of Sociology, Vol.
105, pp. 549-551.
1997 “Response to Loïc J.D. Wacquant’s ‘Three Pernicious Premises in the Study of
the American Ghetto’.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research,
Vol. 22, pp. 160-63.
1997 Review of Saving Our Children from Poverty: What the United States Can Learn
from France, by Barbara Bergmann. Sociological Research Online, Vol. 2, no.
4. [http://www.socresonline.org.uk/2/4/jargowsky.html]
1987 Review of Fighting Poverty: What Works and What Doesn't. Governance: the
Harvard Journal of Public Policy, edited by Sheldon Danziger and Daniel
Weinberg. Winter/Spring Issue. Cambridge, MA: John F. Kennedy School of
Government, Harvard University.
1987 Contributing author and editor of A New Social Contract: Rethinking the Nature
and Purpose of Public Assistance. Report to Governor Mario M. Cuomo, Task
Force on Poverty and Welfare, State of New York.
1986 “Industrial Ownership in New York.” Governance: the Harvard Journal of
Public Policy. Summer/Fall Issue. Cambridge, MA: John F. Kennedy School of
Government.
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1985 Lana Muraskin and Paul A. Jargowsky, Creating and Implementing Family Life
Education in New Jersey. Alexandria, VA: National Association of State Boards
of Education.
Working Papers (not published elsewhere)
2014 “Not Black and White: Taking Account of Multiracial Individuals in Segregation
Studies.” Presented at the 2014 Urban Affairs Association Annual Meeting. San
Antonio, Texas.
2012 Rodney Andrews, Paul A. Jargowsky and Kristin Kuhne, “The Effects of Texas’s
Pre-Kindergarten Program on Academic Performance.” National Center for
Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research, Working Paper 84.
Washington, DC, November 2012. Also issued as Working Paper No. 18598,
National Bureau of Economic Research. Cambridge, MA: December 2012.
2010 Paul A. Jargowsky and Karina Fortuny, “Decomposing the Impact of
Immigration on Metropolitan Area Poverty Rates: 1980-2007.” Paper presented
at the Annual Meeting of the Urban Affairs Association, 3/12/2010, Honolulu,
Hawaii and the Annual Research Meeting of the Association of Public Policy
Analysis and Management, 11/5/2010, Boston, Massachusetts.
2005 John F. Kain, Dan O’Brien, and Paul Jargowsky, “Hopwood and the Top 10
Percent Law: How Have They Affected the College Enrollment Decisions of
Texas High School Graduates.” Texas Schools Project Working Paper. June 22,
2005.
2005 Isaac McFarlin, Paul A. Jargowsky, and Vera Holovchenko. “Who attends
Community Colleges in Texas? And Why?” Texas Schools Project Working
Paper.
2004 Paul A. Jargowsky and Jeongdai Kim, “A Measure of Spatial Segregation: The
Generalized Neighborhood Sorting Index.” Political Economy Working Paper
10/04. School of Social Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas.
2004 Paul A. Jargowsky, Isaac McFarlin, and Vera Holovchenko, “Community
College: Help or Hindrance to Senior College Graduation.” Texas Schools
Project Working Paper. October 2004.
2002 “The National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, Twenty
Years Later: Has the Commission’s ‘City of the Future’ Come to Pass?”
Political Economy Working Paper 22/02. School of Social Sciences, University
of Texas at Dallas.
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2001 “The Social Consequences of Income Inequality and Economic Segregation for
Young Adults: Estimates Using Metropolitan Level Data,” unpublished paper.
1996 The End of Urban Policy as We Know It? Political Economy Working Paper 96-
01. School of Social Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas.
1991 The State and the Child: Improving the Services System for Children. Malcolm
Wiener Center for Social Policy, Working Paper Series, #ES-91-1. John F.
Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
1990 Ghetto Poverty: A Theoretical and Empirical Framework, with David T.
Ellwood. Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy, Working Paper Series, #H-
90-7. John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
AWARDS, HONORS, AND PROFESSIONAL RECOGNITION
2013 Named Century Foundation Fellow, The Century Foundation, New York, NY.
2013 Named Institute for Urban Research Scholar, University of Pennsylvania.
2009 Named Affiliated Scholar, The Urban Institute, Washington, DC.
2006 Yang and Jargowsky (2006) named best article in Volume 28 of the Journal of
Urban Affairs by the Urban Affairs Association.
2006 Elected Member, Policy Council, Section on Community and Urban Sociology,
American Sociological Association.
2005 Chapter 7 of Poverty and Place reprinted in an anthology of “20 of the most
important classic and contemporary readings on cities and society,” including
“classic and first-rate contemporary writings that have had a major impact on the
field of urban sociology and urban studies.” (Nancy Kleniewski, ed. Cities and
Society. Malden, Mass: Blackwell, 2005.)
2003 Named Senior Research Affiliate, National Poverty Center, Gerald R. Ford
School of Public Policy, University of Michigan.
2002 Jargowsky (1994) identified as one of the most frequently cited articles published
in the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management in Peter Rueter and Jeri
Smith-Ready, “Editor’s Note: Assessing JPAM After 20 Years,” Journal of
Policy Analysis and Management 21: 339-353.
2001-2004 Elected Member, Policy Council, Association for Public Policy Analysis and
Management.
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1999 Awarded “Best Book in Urban Affairs” by the Urban Affairs Association for
Poverty and Place: Ghettos, Barrios, and the American City. First biennial
award; presented at the Urban Affairs Association 29th Annual Meeting,
Louisville, KY, April 1999.
1998 Poverty and Place: Ghettos, Barrios, and the American City selected by Choice
magazine as “One of the Outstanding Academic Books of 1997.”
1986 Manuel C. Carballo Award for the best graduate student paper (with Mark X.
Cronin) on the implementation and management of human services programs.
1985 Executive Editor, Governance: The Harvard Journal of Public Policy.
1984-1986 John F. Kennedy Fellow, John E. Thayer Scholarship, and Arthur Lehman
Scholarship, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
1980 Class of 1869 Prize for Excellence in Ethics awarded for Senior Thesis in Moral
Philosophy, Department of Philosophy, Princeton University.
RESEARCH GRANTS (Principal Investigator unless otherwise noted)
2012 South Jersey Strengthening Families Initiative Evaluation. Stacia Gillard-
Matthews, Gwendolyn Harris, Paul A. Jargowsky, and Robin Stevens (PI).
Pascale Sykes Foundation, $4,000,000.
2010 The Reconcentration of Poverty. Brookings Institution, $25,000.
2010 Evaluation of the United Way 2020 Goals, Tim Bray, Principal Investigator, with
Paul A. Jargowsky, Co-PI. The United Way of Metropolitan Dallas, $279,000.
2008 Laying the Foundation: An analysis of Pre-AP teacher training in Texas. The
O’Donnell Foundation, $76,613.
2007 The UTD Education Research Center. Paul A. Jargowsky, Principal
Investigator. State of Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, $900,000.
2006 Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER).
David Figlio, Dan Goldhaber, Jane Hannaway, Eric Hanushek, Paul A.
Jargowsky, Helen F. Ladd, Susanna Loeb, Co-Principal Investigators. U.S.
Department of Education, $10,000,000 total, $1.8 million for the Texas Schools
Project (TSP).
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2003 Minority Access to Higher Education, Phase II. Eric Hanushek, Paul Jargowsky,
Dan O’Brien, and Steve Rivkin, Co-Principal Investigators. The Andrew Mellon
Foundation, $350,000. Succeeded John F. Kain as Co-Principal Investigator
upon his death.
2003 Core Support for the Texas Schools Project. Succeeded John F. Kain as
Principal Investigator upon his death. The David Packard Humanities Institute,
$1.1 million.
2002 The Middle Path: The Community College Experience in Texas. Paul A.
Jargowsky and John F. Kain, Co-Principal Investigators. The Russell Sage
Foundation, $137,000.
2002 Windows on Urban Poverty: Describing and Mapping Concentrated Poverty in
the 2000 Census. The Brookings Institution, $15,000.
1998 The Social Consequences of Economic Inequality and Economic Segregation.
Christopher Jencks, Susan Mayer, and Paul A. Jargowsky, Co-Principal
Investigators. The Russell Sage Foundation, $204,000.
1997 Suburbs and Slums: Understanding the Evolving Structure of Metropolitan
America. The Twentieth Century Fund, $80,000.
1993 Economic Segregation in U.S. Metropolitan Areas. The Institute for Research on
Poverty, University of Wisconsin, $15,000.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
Editorial Boards
2013 Member of the Editorial Board, Housing Policy Debate
2009-present Member of the Editorial Board, City and Community
1992-1997 Member, Advisory Board, Policy Studies Journal
Service to Professional Organizations
2010-2011 Chair, Best Book In Urban Affairs Selection Committee, Urban Affairs
Association.
2006-2008 Elected Member, Policy Council, Community and Urban Sociology Section,
American Sociological Association.
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2007 Member, Best article in the Journal of Urban Affairs Selection Committee,
Urban Affairs Association.
2008-present Member, Executive Committee, Texas Schools Project, University of Texas at
Dallas.
2004-2006 Member, Committee on the Future of the Fall Research Conference, Association
for Public Policy Analysis and Management.
2004-2009 Member, Research Advisory Committee, Texas Higher Education Opportunity
Project, Princeton University. Prof. Marta Tienda, Director.
2002-2003 Member, Best Book in Urban Affairs Award Selection Committee, Urban Affairs
Association.
2001-2005 Member, Science Advisory Committee, Center for Urban Environmental
Research and Education, University of Maryland at Baltimore County.
2000-2002 Chair (2001) and member (2000, 2002), Robert E. Park Award Selection
Committee, Community and Urban Sociology Section, American Sociological
Association.
1999-2002 Member, National Advisory Board, Institute for Research on Poverty, University
of Minnesota Law School.
1999, 2009 Proposal reviewer, Visiting Scholar Program, Russell Sage Foundation.
1996-present Book manuscript reviewer for the Russell Sage Foundation and Cambridge
University Press.
1991-present Article Referee for numerous professional journals in several disciplines,
including American Journal of Sociology, American Sociological Review,
Geographical Analysis, Housing Policy Debate, Journal of Policy Analysis and
Management, Policy Studies Journal, Regional Science and Economics, and
Urban Geography.
Miscellaneous
2009 Participant, Summer 2009 Workshop: Race and Inequality in Education, Center
for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS), Stanford University,
June 15-19.
2006 Member, Governor’s Business Council Education Advisory Group (Texas).
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2002 Jeongdai Kim and I developed the pioneering web site, “Windows on Urban
Poverty” (http://www.urbanpoverty.net), an interactive mapping tool providing
easy access to neighborhood-level maps of poverty and basic demographic
characteristics, based on census data from 1970 to 2000. Development of this
web site was funded in part by The Brookings Institution. Launched in 2002,
this site is provided free of any charge as a public service to students, faculty,
community groups, city planners, journalists and others who have an interest in
neighborhood change and urban development. Urbanpoverty.net has been a
featured web site by both the “The Scout Report” and “EconData,” two services
that highlight interesting and useful web sites.
1991, 1997 Judge, Family and Children's Services Programs, Innovations Project, John F.
Kennedy School of Government (a national awards competition sponsored by the
Ford Foundation).
Aug. 1994 Invited participant, Advisors Forum for the President's Fair Housing Council,
August 11-12, Washington, D.C.
1988-1991 Participant and Organizer, Executive Session on Making the System Work for
Poor Children, John F. Kennedy School of Government (an interdisciplinary task
force sponsored by the Carnegie Foundation).
UNIVERSITY SERVICE
Rutgers-Camden
2013-present Chair, Rutgers-Camden School of Arts and Sciences, Social Sciences Advisory
Committee on Appointments and Promotions
2013-present Dept. of Public Policy and Administration (DPPA) Scholastic Standing
Committee
2013-present DPPA Web Site Committee
2013 Rutgers-Camden Arts and Sciences Dean’s Awards Committee
2013 Faculty of Arts and Sciences NEH Summer Stipend Faculty Review Committee
2013 Rutgers-Camden Strategic Planning Committee, Research Subcommittee
2013 Rutgers University Strategic Planning Committee, Robust Core of the Arts and
Humanities Subcommittee
2013 History Department Review Committee for Charlene Mires
2013 Psychology Department Review Committee for Charlotte Markey
2012-2013 Rutgers-Camden School of Arts and Sciences, Social Sciences Advisory
Committee on Appointments and Promotions
2012-2013 DPPA Curriculum Committee
2012 Psychology Department Review Committee for Naomi Marmorstein
2011-2012 Chair, DPPA Community Development Search Committee
2011-2012 Chair, DPPA Doctoral Program in Public Affairs Committee
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University of Texas at Dallas
2010-2011 Program Head, Public Policy and Political Economy Program
2010-2011 Member, Executive Committee, School of Economic, Political, and Policy
Sciences
2010 Economics, Political, and Policy Sciences Computer Resources Committee
2009-2011 Vice Chair, Learning Management Systems Committee
2008-present Member, Executive Committee, Texas Schools Project
1991-2011 Committee on Examination in Methods, Doctoral Program in Political Economy
2009 Member, Third Year Review for Sherry Li (Economics)
2006 Chair, Program Review Committee for Math and Science Education
2005 Chair, Third Year Review Committee for Sheryl Skaggs (Sociology)
2005 Member, Tenure Review Committee for Fang Qiu (Geosciences)
2005 Elected Member, Faculty Advisory Committee
2002-2003 Member, Executive Committee for the School of Social Sciences
2002-2003 Chair, Political Economy Program Review Committee
2002-2008 Member, Graduate Studies Committee
2002 Chair, Third Year Review Committee for Fang Qiu (Geosciences)
2001-2002 Enrollment Management Task Force
2001-2002 Elected member, Faculty Senate
2001-2002 Search Committee in Sociology
2001 Ad Hoc Committee on the Selection of a Dean of the School of Social Sciences
2001 Ad Hoc Committee on the Potential Restructuring of the University
2001-2001 Search Committee in Economics
2000-2001 Search Committee in Geographic Information Sciences
2000-2001 Committee on the Core Curriculum
1999-2000 Committee on Educational Policy
COMMUNITY SERVICE
2010-2011 Volunteer, Parkland Hospital Burn Unit
2009 Advisor to the United Way, consulting on goals for the “Live United” campaign.
2006-2009 Parent Volunteer, Golden Eagle Band, Richardson High School, Richardson, TX.
2005 Parent Volunteer, Academic Decathlon Team, Richardson High School.
2003 Assistant Coach, Canyon Creek Elementary Chess Team, Richardson
Independent School District.
2002-2003 Member, Community Assessment Technical Advisory Committee, United Way
of Metropolitan Dallas.
2001 Member, Community Needs Assessment Committee, United Way of
Metropolitan Dallas.
2001-2003 Coach, Youth Basketball, Spring Valley Athletic Association, 3rd and 4th grade
girls.
1999-2000 Coach, Youth Basketball, YMCA, 5th and 6th Grade Girls Basketball.
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PUBLIC LECTURES AND SELECTED PRESENTATIONS
Feb. 19, 2013 Presenter, Visions of Camden Exhibition. “Disinvestment.” Stedman Gallery,
Rutgers, Camden.
Oct. 4, 2012 Speaker, “The Effects of Texas’s Targeted Pre-Kindergarten Program on
Academic Performance.” University of Maryland-INVALSI Conference:
Improving Education through Accountability and Evaluation - Lessons from
around the world. Rome, Italy.
Sept. 14, 2012 Panelist, “How has the concentration of poverty changed since publication of
The Truly Disadvantaged?” The Truly Disadvantaged after Twenty-Five Years,
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.
Sept. 29, 2011 Public Lecture, “Demographic Trends in Urban Neighborhoods.” Institute for
Policy Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
Aug. 27, 2009 Panelist, Plano Multicultural Outreach Roundtable. “Changing Demographics,
Changing Neighborhoods in the Dallas Metropolitan Area.” Center for
American and International Law, Plano, Texas.
May 21, 2009 Speaker, Thursday’s Child Public Policy Forum, “Immigrant Families, English
Language Learners, and the Future of Education Reform,” The Urban Institute,
Washington DC (co-sponsored by Chapin Hall, The University of Chicago).
[Audio recording available at http://www.urban.org/events/thursdayschild/
Immigrant-Families-and-Education-Reform.cfm.]
Dec. 3, 2008 Speaker, Confronting Concentrated Poverty: A Policy Forum, The Board of
Governors, U.S. Federal Reserve System, Washington DC. [Audio and Video
available at http://www.frbsf.org/cpreport/policy_forum.html.]
Nov. 6, 2008 “Economic Integration: What can Cities Do About It?” (with Todd Swanstrom),
presentation to CEOs for Cities Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL.
Oct. 6, 2008 “Before or After the Bell? School Context and Neighborhood Effects on
Achievement.” Invited lecture, Harvard University Inequality Seminar,
Cambridge, MA.
May 2, 2008 “Children of Immigrants and the Concentration of Poverty.” Demography
Colloquium, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX.
Mar. 27, 2008 “Before or After the Bell? School Context and Neighborhood Effects on
Achievement.” Philadelphia Federal Reserve Board, conference on
“Reinventing Older Communities: How Does Place Matter?” Philadelphia, PA.
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Jul. 2, 2007 “A Measure of Spatial Segregation” with Jeongdai Kim. New Frontiers in the
Field of Segregation Measurement and Analysis, Monte Verita, Switzerland.
Jul. 3, 2007 “Segregation, Inequality, and Information” with Jeongdai Kim. New Frontiers in
the Field of Segregation Measurement and Analysis, Monte Verita, Switzerland.
Mar. 1, 2007 “Immigrants and Neighborhoods of Concentrated Poverty:
Assimilation or Stagnation?” Institute for Policy Studies Seminar, Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore MD.
Dec. 11, 2006 “John Kain’s Contributions to Education Research.” Association of Collegiate
Schools of Planning 47th Annual Conference. Ft. Worth, TX.
Oct. 20, 2006 “Immigrants and the Concentration of Poverty: Assimilation or Stagnation?”
Conference on Local Contexts and the Prospects for the Second Generation,
West Coast Poverty Center, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Sep. 29, 2006 “Concentration of Poverty and Metropolitan Development.” Workshop on
Poverty and Place, The Cambridge/MIT Institute, St. Catharine’s College,
Cambridge, UK.
Aug. 27, 2006 “Poverty and Concentration of Poverty.” Funders’ Exchange on Community
Poverty Reduction and Prosperity Promotion, The Aspen Institute. Aspen, CO.
Aug. 21, 2006 “Hurricane Katrina: A Window on the Concentration of Poverty.” National
Association of Welfare Research and Statistics. Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
July 12, 2006 “Concentrated Poverty: What, Where and Why.” Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas Policy Forum. Dallas, Texas.
June 5, 2006 “The Decline of the Underclass.” Ninth Annual National Welfare Research and
Evaluation Conference, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Arlington, VA.
May 9, 2006 “Concentration of Poverty and Metropolitan Development.” U.S. Federal
Reserve Bank, Annual Community Affairs Officers Conference. Atlanta,
Georgia.
Nov. 17, 2005 “The Structure of Poverty in the US.” Invited remarks at Congressional Black
Caucus Foundation Conference, “Poverty, Race, and Policy: Strategic
Advancement of a Poverty Reduction Agenda.” The National Trust for Historic
Preservation, Washington, DC.
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June 20, 2005 “The ‘Underclass’ Revisited: A Social Problem in Decline.” With Rebecca
Yang. Invitation only briefing, Welfare Reform and Beyond Program, The
Brookings Institution, Washington, DC.
Mar. 25, 2005 Plenary Address, “Overturning Tiebout: The Case for Regulating Suburban
Development”, Southwestern Social Science Association Annual Meeting. New
Orleans, Louisiana.
Dec. 11, 2004 Plenary Address, “Segregation in US Cities,” Research Committee for the 21st
Century (RC21) Conference, “Paths of Urban Change.” National University of
Singapore.
Oct. 7, 2004 Public panel discussion, Centre de Science Humaines and Le Centre de ressource
et d'information Française (FIRC) Café Scientifique, “Segregation &
Fragmentation in large metropolises: An inevitable trend?” New Delhi, India.
Nov. 30, 2004 Public lecture, “Segregation by Race and Class in US Cities,” jointly sponsored
with the India International Center and Centre de Science Humaines. New Delhi,
India.
Sep. 28, 2004 Invited Lecture, “Is Segregation Dangerous?” University of Bielefeld, Germany.
Sep. 21, 2004 Presentation, “Suburban Sprawl and Central City Decline,” Dallas Interfaith
Alliance, King of Glory Lutheran Church, Dallas, Texas, September 21, 2004.
Apr. 2, 2004 Plenary Speaker, “Cities as Divided Places: Comparative Racial and Social
Segregation,” Urban Affairs Association Annual Conference, Washington D.C.
Mar. 5, 2004 Invited Lecture, “Segregation, Suburban Sprawl, and the Future of Cities,” The
RAND Graduate School.
Sep. 25, 2003 Invited Lecture, “Changes in Urban Form and Poverty Concentration in the
1990s,” Johns Hopkins University.
May 19, 2003 Public Lecture, “Stunning Progress, Hidden Problems: Concentrated Poverty in
the 1990s.” The Brookings Institution, Washington D.C. (live webcast).
April 4, 2003 Seminar, “Help or Hindrance? Community College Attendance and Senior
College Graduation.” Cecil and Ida Green Center for the Study of Science and
Society, University of Texas at Dallas.
Nov. 1, 2002 Public lecture, “A Stunning Reversal: Concentrated Poverty in the 1990s.”
University of California, Berkeley.
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May 6, 2002 Public lecture, “Understanding the Urban System: Suburban Development and
Central City Decline.” Texas Institute for Society and Health, Rice University.
Houston, Texas.
Apr. 26, 2002 Invited presentation, “Spatial Dimensions of Poverty.” National Research
Council, Workshop for the Committee to Review Research and Applications of
GIS at the U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development. Washington, D.C.
Nov. 14, 2001 Invited presentation, “Neighborhoods, Places, and Opportunity.” National
Research Council, Workshop on Equality of Opportunity in Metropolitan Areas:
The Importance of Place. Washington, D.C.
Oct. 29, 2001 Invited Seminar, “Understanding the Urban System: Suburban Development and
Central City Decline.” Center for Urban Environmental Research and Education,
University of Maryland at Baltimore County. Baltimore, MD.
June 22, 2001 Invited lecture, “Suburban Sprawl and Central City Decline.” Growth
Management Leadership Alliance. West Palm Beach, Florida.
Mar. 17, 2000 “Author Meets Critics” panel on Poverty and Place, Southwestern Social Science
Association. Galveston, Texas.
Sep. 27, 1998 Invited speaker, “Changes in the Interaction of Segregation by Race and Class in
the United States.” Workshop on the Dimensions of Social Exclusion, Hanse
Institute for Advanced Study, University of Bremen/University of Oldenburg.
Delmenhorst, Germany.
Apr. 3, 1998 Participant and co-organizer with Christopher Jencks and Susan Mayer, “The
Consequences of Inequality: The State of Current Research,” workshop
sponsored by the Joint Center for Poverty Research, University of
Chicago/Northwestern University, held at the Harvard Faculty Club. Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
Mar. 28, 1998 “Crossing the Line: Poverty in the Suburbs.” Presented at “Suburban Racial
Change,” a conference sponsored by the Harvard Civil Rights Project and the
Taubman Center on State and Local Government, John F. Kennedy School of
Government, Harvard University. Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Mar. 23, 1998 “The Spatial Structure of Urban Poverty” (lead speaker), Child Health and Urban
Poverty Colloquium, Georgetown University. Washington, D.C.
May 29, 1997 “The Expansion of Ghettos and Barrios in U.S. Metropolitan Areas: 1970-1990,”
International Conference on Migration, Social Exclusion, and the Globalization
of Urban Populations, Migrants in European Cities Network, University of
Warwick. Warwick, U.K.
19
Apr. 1997 “Ghetto and Barrio Expansion in the United States,” public lecture and press
briefing, University of Guanajauto. Guanajauto, Mexico.
Feb. 20, 1997 “Structural Economic Changes, Segregation by Race and Income, and the
Expansion of Ghettos and Barrios, 1970 to 1990,” presented to the Joint Center
for Poverty Research, University of Chicago and Northwestern University.
Chicago, Illinois.
SELECTED MEDIA COVERAGE
2013 Claudia Vargas, “Amid crushing poverty and crime, Camden fights on.” The
Philadelphia Inquirer, February 11, 2013.
2013 NBC News, “What’s the matter with Camden?” March 7, 2013.
2006 “Q&A with Paul A. Jargowsky (Interview).” Banking and Community
Perspectives 2006, 2 (November), pp. 4-5. Dallas, TX: Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas.
2006 Robert Miller, “Getting to the Facts on Education.” The Dallas Morning News,
July 30, 2006.
2005 Quoted in numerous newspaper articles regarding social and economic aspects of
Post-Katrina resettlement, including The Chicago Tribune, The Ft. Worth Star-
Telegram, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, and The Sacramento Bee.
2003 Extensive media coverage of “Stunning Progress, Hidden Problems:
Concentration of Poverty in the 1990s,” including:
Robert Pear, “Smaller Percentage of Poor Live in High-Poverty Areas,” The
New York Times, May 18, 2003, p. 20;
Guest on C-Span’s Washington Journal, May 20, 2003, 7:30-8:00am EDT;
Voice of America, May 21, 2003.
2000 Work discussed in David Finkel, “In the Shadows of Prosperity; For a Seemingly
Intractable Underclass, Hope and Dreams Persist,” The Washington Post
(January 17, 2000, p.1) and Craig Flournoy, “Buchmeyer Rules Sunnyvale
Zoning Excludes Minorities,” The Dallas Morning News (August 3, 2000, p. 1).
1999 Subject of featured interview, The Dallas Morning News, Sunday, April 4, 1999,
p. 1J (Interviewed by Chris Kelley).
1999 Guest on The Kathleen Dunn Show, WHAD-FM, October 21, 1999. Milwaukee,
Wisconsin
20
1999 Guest on Science Update (#1454: Economic Segregation), nationally syndicated
radio program produced by American Association for the Advancement of
Science (AAAS).
1997 Guest on The Exchange, New Hampshire Public Radio, May 22nd, 1997.
1997 Press Briefing regarding Poverty and Place for Washington Press Affiliates,
Brookings Institution, March 25. Washington, D.C.
1996 Golden, Dan. 1996. “The Geography of Poverty.” The Boston Globe Sunday
Magazine (Boston, Massachusetts), June 2nd, p. 9.
1993 David Whitman, “The Shifting State of Black Ghettos,” U.S. News and World
Reports, January 18, 1993, pp. 33-37.
TEACHING ACTIVITIES
Doctoral Supervision: Chair of Doctoral Dissertation Committee
Rutgers Universty – Camden, Ph.D. in Public Affairs
In progress Jason Rivera
In progress Prentiss Dantzler
In progress Wendy Osefo
University of Texas at Dallas, Ph.D. in Public Policy and Political Economy
2010 Yu Xue, doctoral candidate in Public Policy. Topic: “An Empirical Investigation
of Occupational Choice with Human Capital Accumulation over the Life
Course.”
2010 Adam Guerrero, “The Determinants of College Student Retention.”
2008 Kristin Kuhne, “Pre-school and Academic Achievement in Texas.”
2007 Yoonhwan Park, “Crime and Suburban Sprawl.”
2007 Melissa Alvarez-Montgomery, “The Impact of Medicaid and SCHIP on Children
with Asthma” (co-chair with Richard Scotch).
2005 Rebecca Yang, “Suburban Sprawl and the Concentration of Poverty.”
21
2004 Percy Galimbertti, “The Effect of Dropping Out of High School Due to
Pregnancy on Earnings.”
1999 Kristine Anne Lykens, “Child Health Status in the United States and Medicaid
Expansions, 1986-1990.”
Doctoral Supervision: Member of Doctoral Dissertation Committee
University of Texas at Dallas, Ph.D. in Public Policy and Political Economy
2011 Sherheryar Banuri, “Three Essays on the Impacts of Anti-Corruption Policies:
Lab Experiments in the US and Pakistan.” Chair: Catherine Eckel.
2011 Jing Li, “Three Essays on Human Capital.” Chair: James Murdoch
2010 Mohamed El-Komi, “Poverty: Alleviation through Microfinance and
Implications for Education.” Chair: Rachel Croson.
2009 Matthew Openshaw, “The Health Impact of Limited Armed Conflict: Individual-
Level Evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa.” Chair: Marie Chevrier.
2009 Teresa Dale Nelson, “Hispanic Dropouts and Pregnancies in Texas Public High
Schools.” Chair: Nathan Berg.
2008 Carlos Mendiola, “Harvesting Biotechnology Ventures: Modeling the
Probabilities for Alternative Liquidity Events.” Chair: Donald A. Hicks.
2007 Irene Ngugi, “School Finance Equalization and Students Achievement.” Chair:
Wim Vijverberg.
2006 Steven R. Wolfson, “Racial Profiling in Texas Vehicle Stops.” Chair: Richard
Scotch.
2005 Stephanie Martin, “Traditional Practices in Native Alaskan Communities and the
Social Control of Alcohol Abuse.” Chair: Brian Berry.
2005 Sharon Wrobel, “The Effectiveness of Language Minority Education Programs
in a Large Texas School District: A Longitudinal Case Study.” Chair: Paul
Tracy.
2004 Mark Alan Mitchell, “The Effect of Occupant versus Neighborhood Factors on
Housing Modifications and Repairs: Planning and Evaluation of Urban
Redevelopment Programs.” Chair: Irving Hoch.
22
2003 Shungu K. Lokole, “Human Capital Investments: Determinants of School
Duration and Basic Cognitive Skills among Children in Cote D’Ivoire.” Chair:
Wim P. M. Vijverberg.
2003 Timothy McDonough, “Digital Diffusion: Explaining Emerging Spatial Structure
of Broadband Service Deployment.” Chair: Donald Hicks.
2001 April Barclay, “The Effects of Managed Care on the Utilization of Mental Health
Services.”
1999 Dan O’Brien, “Three Essays on Early Academic Achievement of Minority and
Disadvantaged Students.” Chair: John F. Kain.
Courses Taught
Rutgers University – Camden, 2011-present
Public Affairs Doctoral Program
Quantitative Methods I (Descriptive and Inferential Statistics)
Quantitative Methods II (Regression Analysis)
Research Design
Categorical and Limited Dependent Variables
Practicum
Urban Studies Undergraduate Program
Camden and the Greater Philadelphia Region
University of Texas at Dallas, 1991-2011
Graduate Program in Political Economy
Descriptive and Inferential Statistics
Advanced Regression Analysis
Categorical and Limited Dependent Variables
Domestic Social Policies
Undergraduate Programs in Economics and/or Sociology:
Principles of Microeconomics
Intermediate Microeconomics
Tools for Economists
Poverty and Public Policy
Poverty and Unemployment
Social Welfare Policy
Research Methods
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John F. Kennedy School of Government, 1997-1998
Master in Public Policy Program
Quantitative Analysis and Empirical Methods
Advanced Quantitative Methods
Other Teaching
Statistics and Public Policy. Seminar for Mexican Government Officials, University of
Guanajauto/University of Texas at Dallas, Guanajauto, Mexico. April 25-26, 1997.
Guest Lecturer, European Online Seminar on Urban Transformation, Poverty, Spatial
Segregation and Social Exclusion, University of Urbino (Italy).
OTHER PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
2010-2011 Consultant to the Promise Neighborhood Research Consortium, University
of Oregon.
2008-2009 Consultant to CEOs for Cities, a national network of urban leaders from the
civic, business, academic, and philanthropic sectors, regarding policies to
promote economic integration. With Todd Swanstrom, University of Illinois at
St. Louis.
2006-2007 Consultant to Plaintiffs, Ideal Homes v. Midwest City, Oklahoma. Litigation
concerning disproportionate impact of exclusionary zoning on minority residents
seeking affordable housing.
2001, 2004 Consultant to Relman and Associates, a Washington D.C. law firm
specializing in fair housing and discrimination law. Demographic and spatial
analysis of 2000 census data.
2002 Consultant to Plaintiffs, Garza v. Dallas Independent School District.
Litigation concerning the drawing of boundaries for School District Trustee
elections.
1998 Consultant to Plaintiffs, Scheff v. O’Neill. School desegregation litigation.
Segregation analyses and methodological critiques of plaintiff’s expert witnesses.
1994 Consultant to Plaintiffs, Young v. Cisneros. Fair housing litigation. Prepared a
critique of HUD methodology for assessing racial concentrations of housing.
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1994 Consultant to Plaintiffs, Dews, et al., v. Town of Sunnyvale. Fair housing
litigation. Analyzed interrelationships of race, income, rents, home values, and
housing ownership patterns.
1993 Consultant to Plaintiffs, Walker et al., vs. HUD et al. Fair housing litigation.
Analyzed effects on the concentration of poverty of alternative plans for housing
persons on the Dallas Housing Authority waiting list.
1987-1991 Project Coordinator, Children in Poverty Project, and Assistant to the Director,
Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy, Kennedy School of Government,
Havard University. Cambridge, MA.
1986-1987 Project Director, Task Force on Poverty and Welfare, State of New York.
Albany, NY. Structured task forces meetings and staff work to produce The New
Social Contract.
Sum. 1985 Assistant to the Director of Management and Planning, Office for Economic
Development, City of New York. New York, NY.
1983-1984 Research Associate, National Association of State Boards of Education.
Arlington, VA.
1982-1983 Writer/Research Assistant, Center for Policy Research. Washington, DC.
Principal research assistant to Dr. Amitai Etzioni, Director.
1980-1981 Paralegal, Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam and Roberts. New York, New York.
1979 Paralegal, Legal Aid of Mercer County. Trenton, NJ.
Last revised: March 31, 2014