Sentences with phrase «sociologists at»

BOSTON GLOBE - Aug 5 - With so - called gray divorce on the rise, according to sociologists at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, a growing number of baby boomers are finding themselves back on the market.
OMAHA WORLD - HERALD — Dec 27 — Sociologists at UCLA found that even a $ 3 - an - hour increase in a woman's «premarital wages» boosted her candidacy in the «marriage market.»
Sociologists at Mainz University investigate the educational opportunities of year four pupils in Wiesbaden relative to their social background
A panel of sociologists at the National Science Foundation recently turned down three of Song's funding proposals; one reviewer even used the term «grade school reasoning» to describe the logic behind the adaptive sex ratio hypothesis.
According to a study conducted by sociologists at the University of Rovira i Virgili (Spain), there is a feminine way as well as a masculine way to behave on the Internet: males tend to directly allude to ethnic and cultural issues whereas females are less obvious in doing so.
But a new study by sociologists at BYU, Cornell and LSU provides a rigorous new estimate.
Immigration to the U.S. may result in increased smoking in Latino and Asian women, according to new research from sociologists at Rice University, Duke University and the University of Southern California.
Claire Marris and Nikolas Rose are sociologists at King's College, London.
Organized around DoSER's joint survey project with sociologists at Rice University, four panelists referenced preliminary data that was introduced by principle investigator Elaine Howard Ecklund to discuss ways in which scientists and religious communities (particularly evangelical Christians) can move beyond misconceptions of one another and into productive conversation.
Neighborhood poverty is likely to make a mother more fearful about letting her children play outdoors, according to a new study by sociologists at Rice University and Stanford University.
This comes to mind upon reading about a conference on young Catholics held at Fordham University, led by Christian Smith and James Davidson, sociologists at Notre Dame and Purdue, respectively.
Unless, of course, you just want to take these sociologists at their word because it suits your agenda.
Job applicants who mentioned any form of faith affiliation on their resumes were 26 % less likely to be contacted by employers than candidates who didn't, according to the study conducted by sociologists at the University of Connecticut.
«Buying a neighborhood is probably one of the most important things you can do for your kid,» explains Ann Owens, a sociologist at the University of Southern California, who studied how wealthy people use their means to improve their kids» lives effectively.
«There's a huge change in the composition of households,» said Paula England, a sociologist at New York University.
Dr. Esteban Calvo, a sociologist at Columbia University, has conducted research which indicates there's truth to the maxim «use it or lose it.»
«We just have this great big unknown out there about where all the money is coming from,» Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University who studies money in the conservative movement, recently told me.
At the same time, climate - denier funding from family and corporate foundations — say, Exxon's foundation — has declined, according to Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University who studies the climate change «counter-movement.»
Glen Elder, the sociologist at the University of North Carolina, who's done field work in Baltimore, said, «At a lower level of skill, if you lose a job and don't have fathers or brothers with jobs — if you don't have a good social network — you get drawn back into the street.
Kevin Wozniak, a sociologist at UMass Boston, reviewed polls after the Newtown school shooting in 2012 and found that the event coincided with a temporary spike in support for gun control, followed by a leveling off and return to pre-mass shooting opinion by the end of 2013.
Lindsay is a sociologist at Rice University, and he examines with care the ascendancy of evangelicals in four sectors of the American elite: politics, the academy, arts and entertainment, and corporate leadership.
Yet almost seventy years later, under the Chinese government's harsh suppression, that population has reached more than sixty million, according to Fenggang Yang, a sociologist at Purdue University.
Look at this: Elaine Howard Ecklund is a sociologist at Rice University.
First tale: A tenured sociologist at a prominent research university, with a couple of books under his belt on related subjects, publishes the first - ever research, using a nationally representative sample, on the young - adult outcomes for kids raised by people who have same - sex romantic relationships.
According to a recent study cited by Maurice Zeitlin, a sociologist at UCLA, in 1960 21 cents out of every new investment dollar went overseas; by 1980 that figure had more than doubled.
The risk was that he chose Darren E. Sherkat, a sociologist at Southern Illinois University whom Regnerus would later describe (without fear of contradiction) as someone «who has long harbored negative sentiment about me.»
First tale: A tenured sociologist at a prominent research university, with a couple of books under his belt on related subjects, publishes the first - ever research, using a nationally representative sample, on the young - adult outcomes for kids raised by people who have same - sex romantic....
«Baptists tend to be in silos and tend not to overlap with other denominations, but Moore is able to cross over to different pockets of evangelicalism,» says Michael Lindsay, a sociologist at Rice University in Houston.
The study's author Richard Petts, a sociologist at Ball State University in Indiana, observed that religion often times give parents another medium through which to express accountability to their kids:
Even Pamela Smock, a sociologist at the University of Michigan who studies marriage and money, says she was somewhat shocked by that.
When I interviewed Eric Anderson, an American sociologist at England's University of Winchester, a few years ago, when his provocative book, The Monogamy Gap: Men, Love, and the Reality of Cheating, was published, I was disturbed by his claim that cheating is a rational choice for people constrained by the social dictate of monogamy.
Her comment of Camille as a «tough woman» could not have come at a more interesting time, as I had just stumbled upon a study, «Black Marriage Through the Prism of Gender Race, and Class,» by Kecia R. Johnson, an assistant professor at Florida State University, and Karyn Loscocco, a sociologist at the University of Albany.
Unfortunately, Darren Sherkat, a sociologist at Southern Illinois University, found that marriages between people of the same religious beliefs tended to have a better chance of lasting than interfaith marriages.
«There is a theory that unusual names can benefit the person,» says Dalton Conley, a sociologist at New York University and author of «Parentology.»
The Globe article quoted Dr. Murray Straus, a sociologist at the University of New Hampshire who studies the effects of corporal punishment on kids, as saying that people think that spanking will work when nothing else does.
According to my chat with Eric Anderson, an American sociologist at England's University of Winchester and author of The Monogamy Gap: Men, Love, and the Reality of Cheating, the college men in his study who cheated on their partners all said they loved them and didn't want to lose them.
Amy Hsin, a sociologist at Queens College, has found that parents who spend the bulk of their time with children under 6 watching TV or doing nothing can actually have a «detrimental» effect on them.
When I spoke with Eric Anderson, an American sociologist at England's University of Winchester and author of the provocative book, The Monogamy Gap: Men, Love, and the Reality of Cheating, he said people are afraid to be honest about things like their sexual needs and desires that monogamy doesn't allow, and because of that they often start cheating:
«People are having smaller families and more children are growing up with fewer siblings,» says Donna Bobbitt - Zeher, a sociologist at Ohio State University in Columbus.
In one study of 297 married couples, in relationships where there was marital discord but the couple stayed together, the grown children were more unhappily married years down the road, according to Paul Amato, a sociologist at Pennsylvania State University and co-author of «A Generation at Risk.»
«I think it's fair to say that the women who have run the gauntlet and gotten advanced STEM degrees will find the labor market quite welcoming if they choose to seek employment in academic STEM jobs,» writes Jennifer Glass, a sociologist at the University of Texas, Austin, in an e-mail.
Gunter's assumption is borne out in a comparison of the GMU findings with those drawn from scientifically rigorous surveys at the 2017 march by Heaney and Dana Fisher, a sociologist at the University of Maryland in College Park.
But that is too simplistic an explanation, says Theda Skocpol, a sociologist at Harvard University.
J. Gordon Arbuckle Jr., an associate professor and extension sociologist at Iowa State University, has done extensive research on how farmers view climate change.
The Olympic Games date back to the eighth century bc, and Greek scientists are naturally proud of their heritage, says Minas Samatas, a political sociologist at the University of Crete in Rethymno, who studied the 2004 Olympics in Athens.
«Put plainly, when cops mess up, the explanations offered tend to be ethical and political, when the more empirically solid explanations are much simpler than that — they are basic failures of human performance under stress,» says Jonathan Wender, a sociologist at the University of Washington and former police officer and sergeant.
Lisa Wolf - Wendel, a sociologist at the University of Kansas in Lawrence who studies gender issues, says the impact of the new policy is hard to predict.
Pepper Schwartz, a sociologist at the University of Washington in Seattle, agrees.
The trouble with most surveys, however, is that they do not address confounding factors, such as a skyrocketing divorce rate, which could mask the effects of income on happiness, says Glenn Firebaugh, a sociologist at Pennsylvania State University in University Park.
Stephen Schoenthaler, a sociologist at California State University at Stanislaus, has been exploring the link between nutrients and mental health by giving basic vitamin and mineral supplements to prison inmates and juvenile detainees.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z