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.

Brittany Battle on the Negative Impacts of Probation and Other Types of Community Supervision
- Brittany Battle
- Podcasts
- May 11 2023

Supporting Youth Exiting Foster Care: What Works and What Is Still Needed
- Melanie Nadon, Hui Huang, Angelique Day, and Sarah Font
- Webinar
- May 03 2023

Daniel Auguste On Barriers To Entrepreneurial Success For Low- And Middle-Income People
- Daniel Auguste
- Podcasts
- April 25 2023

Foster Care Well-Being Outcomes by Race and Ethnicity
- Reeve S. Kennedy, Marina H. Potter, and Sarah A. Font
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- June 2023

Deyanira Nevarez Martinez on the Latinx Paradox and Homelessness
- Deyanira Nevarez Martinez
- Podcasts
- February 28 2023

Eviction Prevention: Reducing Harm to Households and Society
- Fast Focus Policy Brief
- February 2023

Hope Harvey on Doubled-Up Households
- Hope Harvey
- Podcasts
- December 06 2022

Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement 38(2), November 2022: Monetary Sanctions and the Criminal Legal System: Punishment and Revenue
- Edited by James T. Spartz with additional support from Judith Siers-Poisson
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- November 2022

Jamein Cunningham on How Segregation Affects Homicide Rates
- Jamein Cunningham
- Podcasts
- November 21 2022

Criminal justice as racialized resource extraction
- Joshua Page and Joe Soss
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- November 2022