Inequality & Mobility
Inequality describes the extent to which resources or outcomes (e.g., income, wealth, consumption, health, education) are similarly or unevenly distributed among individuals, groups, populations, or societies. Mobility refers to the frequency with which individuals, groups, or populations within a society change social or economic position in areas such as income, wealth, education, occupation, and the like.
Jamila Michener On How State Interference with Local Housing Policy Impacts Tenant Health and Racial Equity
- Jamila Michener
- Podcasts
- 2023
Crystasany Turner on the Strengths, Challenges, and Cultural Assets of Family Child Care Professionals
- Crystasany Turner
- Podcasts
- 2023
Children Living in Grandparent-Led and Multigenerational Families: Implications for Policy and Practice
- Natasha Pilkauskas, J. Michael Collins, and LaShawnDa Pittman
- Webinar
- 2023
Manny Teodoro On Increasing Water Affordability through a Permanent Federal Water Assistance Program
- Manny Teodoro
- Podcasts
- 2023
Thirty Years of the FMLA: What’s Worked, What Hasn’t, and Recommendations for More Equitable Policies
- Marci Ybarra, Shetal Vohra-Gupta, and Maya Rossin-Slater
- Webinar
- 2023
Mina Addo on the Impacts of Non-Standard Work on Retirement Security
- Mina Addo
- Podcasts
- 2023
Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement 39(1), June 2023: Youth with Foster Care Histories: Emancipation and Well-Being
- Edited by James T. Spartz
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- 2023
Brittany Battle on the Negative Impacts of Probation and Other Types of Community Supervision
- Brittany Battle
- Podcasts
- 2023
Supporting Youth Exiting Foster Care: What Works and What Is Still Needed
- Melanie Nadon, Hui Huang, Angelique Day, and Sarah Font
- Webinar
- 2023