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SUMMARY:Michael Esposito: Historical redlining and contemporary disparities in neighborhood life expectancy
DESCRIPTION:On March 4\, 2022\, Michael Esposito\, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Washington University in St. Louis\, will present “Historical redlining and contemporary disparities in neighborhood life expectancy” as part of the Carolina Population Center’s 2021-2022 Interdisciplinary Research Seminar Series. \n\nProfessor Esposito’s research focuses on understanding the production of racialized disparities in population health. \n\n\nDr. Esposito investigates how broad\, racialized social systems – and their constituent institutions – are configured in ways that layer privileges on white populations and hazards on BIPOC populations. His research ultimately seeks to understand how these systematically-distributed privileges and penalties arrive on population health. \nThis work includes studies that examine how the actions of race-cognizant institutions (e.g.\, law enforcement agencies) contribute to health disparities; research that considers how multiple racialized systems overlap to gate access to generative health contexts; and\, projects which demonstrate how structural racism enters and distorts social processes that are foundational to well-being (e.g.\, the association among education and health). \nDr. Esposito uses contemporary statistical methods – Bayesian and counterfactual-based mediation approaches at the moment – across his work.  Esposito’s research has appeared in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences; American Journal of Sociology; American Journal of Public Health and more.
URL:https://www.cpc.unc.edu/event/michael-esposito-historical-redlining-and-contemporary-disparities-in-neighborhood-life-expectancy/
CATEGORIES:2021-22 Interdisciplinary Research Seminars
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CREATED:20220103T203449Z
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SUMMARY:Jenna Nobles: Prenatal Demography: Implications for the Population Sciences
DESCRIPTION:On March 25\, 2022\, Jenna Nobles\, Professor of Sociology at the University of Wisconsin\, will present “Prenatal Demography: Implications for the Population Sciences” as part of the Carolina Population Center’s 2021-2022 Interdisciplinary Research Seminar Series. \nAbout Jenna Nobles: \nI am a professor of sociology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. I study how people make decisions about migration and fertility and the implications of these decisions for population change. My current projects include the links between pregnancy survival and the health of cohorts\, residential change and crime\, anticipatory migration behavior\, demographic responses to the diffusion of health risks\, and the reconstruction of hidden population traits. My research has been funded by the NIH\, NSF\, William T. Grant Foundation\, and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. I am the director of the Center for Demography and Ecology\, the training director for the Collaborative for Reproductive Equity\, and on the executive committee of UW–Madison’s Health Disparities Research postdoctoral scholars program.
URL:https://www.cpc.unc.edu/event/jenna-nobles/
LOCATION:Carolina Square Room 2002\, 123 W. Franklin St\, Chapel Hill\, NC\, 27516
CATEGORIES:2021-22 Interdisciplinary Research Seminars
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