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Credit societies and the search for school fees in Uganda

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Kellogg College
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Presented at 'An Africanist's Legacy - A Workshop in Celebration of the Work of David Parkin' held at Oxford, 8-9 July 2010. Co-authored by Richard Vokes.

Episode Information

Series
Kellogg College
People
David Mills
Keywords
anthropology
education
Africa
Department: Kellogg College
Date Added: 24/08/2010
Duration: 00:21:20

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The Effect of Maternal Stress on Birth Outcomes: Exploiting a Natural Experiment

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Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Florencia Torche, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Faculty Affiliate at the Steinhardt School of Education, NYU and Research Affiliate at INSPIRES, NYU School of Medicine.
A growing literature highlights that in-utero conditions are consequential for individual outcomes throughout the life cycle, but research assessing causal processes is scarce. This paper examines the causal effect of one such condition (maternal stress) on one such outcomes (birth weight). Birth weight is a key outcomes because it has been shown to affect cognitive, educational, and socioeconomic attainment throughout the individual lifecycle. Using a major earthquake as a natural experiment and a difference in difference methodology, we show that maternal stress has a substantial detrimental effect on birth weight. This effect is focused on the first trimester of gestation, and it is mediated by reduced gestational age rather than intra-uterine growth restriction. Several robustness checks reject the hypothesis that the association is driven by unobserved selectivity of mothers. The findings highlight the relevance of understanding the early emergence of unequal opportunity and of investing in maternal wellbeing since the onset of pregnancy.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Florencia Torche
Keywords
stress
sociology
maternal
birth
pregnancy
babies
socioeconomic
baby
cognitive
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:54:43

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School Racial Composition and Racial Preferences for Friends among Adolescents

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Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Jennifer Flashman (University of Oxford).
Adolescents experience different levels of exposure to individuals of other races. Their exposure may shape their racial preferences for friends in important ways, with serious implications for school integration, bussing, and tracking policies. A small body of work studies the impact of school racial composition on racial preferences for friends using discrete choice models. This work uniformly shows that preferences for friends of a particular racial group decline as the size of that group increases within a school. However, the validity of these estimates rests on the assumption that the odds of choosing one possible friend over another remain constant regardless of the other friend alternatives included in or excluded from the set of possible choices. This assumption is known as the IIA assumption (independence of irrelevant alternatives). Violations of IIA can dramatically affect estimations of individuals? preferences. Given that adolescents have a racial preference for friends, if racially identical friend alternatives are included in the choice set, the preference an individual has for friends of that race are distributed across those identical alternatives. If IIA is violated, choice models will provide an underestimate of preferences for black friends when there are many black students within a school and an overestimate of preferences for black friends when there are few black students within a school. Consequently, results from past research suggesting that blacks have stronger preferences for black friends when there are few blacks in a school may be an artifact of violations of the assumption inherent in the modeling strategy. Through a careful analysis of both simulated and actual data, this presentation provides a corrective to past research on friendship choice by showing 1) that key model assumptions are violated when discrete choice analysis is used to model friendship choice, 2) that results are extremely sensitive to violations of model assumptions, and 3) that after correcting models, estimations show that increased contact between racial groups leads to stronger preferences for cross-race friends.

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Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Jennifer Flashman
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:40:14

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Gendered Divisions of Labour and the Intergenerational Transmission of Inequality

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Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Jonathan Gershuny, Department of Sociology, University of Oxford.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Jonathan Gershuny
Keywords
sociology
gender
socio-economic
labor
labour
socioeconomic
inequality
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:53:41

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Public Attitudes to Poverty, Inequality and Welfare: What are the Implications for Social Policy?

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Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Tim Horton, Research Director and Deputy General Secretary of the Fabian Society, Britain's leading left of centre think tank and political society.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Tim Horton
Keywords
sociology
socio-economic
inequality
poverty
socioeconomic
welfare
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:37:57

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Prenatal Health, Educational Attainment and Intergenerational Inequality

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Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Juho Härkönen, Assistant Professor at the Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI), Stockholm University.
Childhood conditions can have a lasting impact on the life-course. Recent years have witnessed a renewed and increasing interest in childhood health as a predictor of socioeconomic and health outcomes later in life. In this study, we analyze the effects of fetal health conditions on educational attainment at age 31 and the role fetal health plays in the intergenerational transmission of educational inequality. Our central contribution to the literature comes from the use of clinically defined health conditions, which feature prevalently in the medical literature and are known correlates of birth and other short-term outcomes. Using ordinal logit models and data from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 Study, we find that mother's smoking during pregnancy has the most robust negative effect on educational attainment. Furthermore, our results suggest a dose-response relationship, and weaker effects if the mother quit smoking during the first trimester. We also find that mother's anemia during pregnancy is associated with lower levels of attained education. Other health indicators - and most notably, preterm birth and small size for gestational age - do not predict later education. These health factors explain little of the persistent class background inequalities in educational attainment, but account for 12 to 19 percent of the difference between children born to unmarried versus married mothers. Our results point to the usefulness of clinical childhood health measures instead of or in addition to more general ones. We also conclude that widening class disparities in mothers' prenatal smoking may increase its importance as a pathway through which socioeconomic (dis)advantage is transmitted across generations.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Juho Härkönen
Keywords
sociology
gender
socio-economic
inequality
marriage
birth
socioeconomic
pregnancy
Health
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:49:05

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How Much Does Family Matter? A Cross-Cultural Study of the Impact of Kin on Birth and Death Rates

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Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Dr Rebecca Sear, Lecturer in Population Studies, London School of Economics.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Rebecca Sear
Keywords
sociology
family
socio-economic
death
birth
socioeconomic
population
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:39:46

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Is IQ a "Fundamental Cause" of Health? Cognitive Ability, Gender, and Survival

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Department of Sociology Podcasts
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Lecture delivered by Professor Robert M Hauser (University of Wisconsin-Madison).
Long-term studies of cognitive ability and mortality have documented a robust relationship between those two variables. Such studies have, for the most part, been remarkably silent on explanations for that relationship. Published explanations range from suggestions that raw intelligence may be a "fundamental cause" of mortality, that it "enhances individuals' care of their own health because it represents learning, reasoning, and problem-solving skills useful in preventing chronic disease and accidental injury," to findings that the association between measured IQ and mortality largely reflect its correlation with educational and economic success. In this analysis of data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, we look at the association between measured IQ and survival across the life course in light of the relationship between measured IQ and grades in secondary school. Briefly, we find that, net of social and economic origins, high school grades have a much larger effect than measured IQ, and the association between measured IQ and survival turns negative once high school grades are controlled. That is, the association between IQ and health is fully explained by its correlation with evaluations of academic performance in secondary school. Moreover, the fact that girls are similar in IQ to boys, but earn higher grades in school, partly explains the gender differential in survival. This finding suggests that survival is largely explained by normative behaviors, that is, doing the right thing in the right way at the right time, and such behaviors are well established by late adolescence.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Sociology Podcasts
People
Robert M Hauser
Keywords
iq
gender
sociology
ability
cognitive
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:51:05

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Organizing Crime

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Podcasts From The Extra-legal Governance Institute (Exlegi)
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Douglas Rogers, George Mason University gives a talk on A Theory of Organized Crime for the Extra Legal Governance Institute.

Episode Information

Series
Podcasts From The Extra-legal Governance Institute (Exlegi)
People
Douglas Rogers
George Mason University
Keywords
law
piracy
crime
organised crime
politics
mafia
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:26:37

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Pirates of Somalia

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Podcasts From The Extra-legal Governance Institute (Exlegi)
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Dr Sarah Percy and Dr Anja Shortland give a talk on Pirates of Somalia for the Extra-Legal Governance Institute.

Episode Information

Series
Podcasts From The Extra-legal Governance Institute (Exlegi)
People
Sarah Percy
Anja Shortland
Keywords
police
pirates
piracy
Africa
crime
somalia
law
Department: Department of Sociology
Date Added: 20/08/2010
Duration: 00:50:22

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