This proposal requests continuation of support for Rand's P50 Population Research Center, extending over a five-year period. The requested program would support the continuation of 3 existing cores (Administrative Core, Data Core, and Research Dissemination Core) and a program of 11 research projects on the demography of families and households (one of the two original foci with which the Center began in 1979). Unifying our proposed research program are: 1. Two interrelated concerns with: (a) transitions by which families and households are formed and reshaped; and (b) the reciprocal influences of parents and children on each other; 2. A common conceptual framework combining economic, sociological, psychological, and demographic perspectives on family and household structure and change; 3. Coordinated use of several large longitudinal micro datasets whose complementarities enable us to test common sets of hypotheses; 4. Common approaches to methodological issues. This research program maintains continuities with our previous research while intensifying our focus on an area that has proven scientifically fruitful: the study of demographic facets of families and households, their influences on the behavior of individuals, and the economic and sociological theories by which that behavior can be explained. The program will continue to profit from three strengths of Rand's population studies: (1) our success in melding several disciplinary perspectives to advance our understanding of household and family behavior, (2) our use of large-scale, longitudinal datasets to conduct analyses at the individual and household levels, and (3) our application of demography to issues of public policy.

Project Start
1979-09-01
Project End
1990-03-31
Budget Start
1986-04-01
Budget End
1987-03-31
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
1986
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Rand Corporation
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Santa Monica
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90401
Delaney, Liam; Smith, James P (2012) Childhood health: trends and consequences over the life course. Future Child 22:43-63
Goldscheider, Frances K; Bures, Regina M (2003) The racial crossover in family complexity in the United States. Demography 40:569-87
Frankenberg, E; Thomas, D (2001) Women's health and pregnancy outcomes: do services make a difference? Demography 38:253-65
Beegle, K; Frankenberg, E; Thomas, D (2001) Bargaining power within couples and use of prenatal and delivery care in Indonesia. Stud Fam Plann 32:130-46
Freedman, V A (1999) Long-term admissions to home health agencies: a life table analysis. Gerontologist 39:16-24
Klerman, J A; Leibowitz, A (1999) Job continuity among new mothers. Demography 36:145-55
Freedman, V A; Martin, L G (1998) Understanding trends in functional limitations among older Americans. Am J Public Health 88:1457-62
Leibowitz, A; Klerman, J A (1995) Explaining changes in married mothers' employment over time. Demography 32:365-78
Karoly, L A; Burtless, G (1995) Demographic change, rising earnings inequality, and the distribution of personal well-being, 1959-1989. Demography 32:379-405
Lillard, L A; Waite, L J (1993) A joint model of marital childbearing and marital disruption. Demography 30:653-81

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