True integration requires genuine connection, whether this is formed in the neighborhood, the school, or some other location. One upside of this paper is that when these spaces are integrated, that integration likely spills into other spaces too.
In a paper out in @SociusJournal , I look at how activity spaces are related to school enrollments over time, and what this implies for school segregation in the era of school choice.
🏫 Not just where you live—where you go matters too.
@disastertyler’s #Socius article shows that L.A. families often choose schools near places they work, shop, or worship—and these #ActivitySpaces help shape #SchoolSegregation.
Read: https://t.co/V7DkrKU5mh
The findings suggest that as neighborhoods continue to change through processes such as gentrification, it is possible for neighbors to remain segregated in terms of where they spend time, go to school, and so on.
As a winter storm approaches Western North Carolina, most of the 5,700 households in FEMA hotel voucher housing have been deemed ineligible. https://t.co/f51bMvLCLQ
Check out my article for Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law, which details how U.S. policies restricting freedom of movement make migrants & asylum seekers more vulnerable to the adverse impacts of climate change.
Full text available here! https://t.co/4aBMfWOkZG
I feel like I'm going mad, every politician is like "the killing of civilians is never acceptable and that's why we must stand with Israel as it drops apartment blocks on children."
Happy to have contributed a piece to the Behavioral and Brain Sciences issue on incremental/radical reform. My paper here: 'The social sciences are increasingly ill-equipped to design system-level reforms' | | https://t.co/qj1QW5UkLd
Athletic conferences were regional for a long time but college sports & it’s corporate conglomerate $$ making machinery has changed this. That old mantra “you’re a student first for student-athletes” is gone. All this traveling they’ll b doing means they ‘athlete-students’ lol