Call for Papers 2018

2018 Call for Papers Annual Meeting, Population Association of America Denver, CO ● April 26 ‐ April 28, 2018 Deadline f...

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2018 Call for Papers Annual Meeting, Population Association of America Denver, CO ● April 26 ‐ April 28, 2018 Deadline for Submissions: September 29, 2017

Before Submitting a Paper or Poster, Please Note the Following: 

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Being accepted to present in an oral or poster session, and then cancelling close to the start of the meeting or not showing up prevents others from having the opportunity to present their work. After you are selected to present at the annual meeting, you will be sent a request to pre-register for the meeting, which will confirm your participation in the meeting. Schedule requests will not be considered, so when making travel arrangements, plan to attend the entire conference. PAA’s two-presenter rule (detailed below) allows an individual to present only twice (four total appearances), and only those two presentations are considered for scheduling purposes. Because of the sheer volume of co-authors, we cannot consider conflicts of a non-presenting author when setting the conference session schedule. If you make changes to the presenting author after the schedule has been set, please keep this in mind. Organizers will not review papers from close collaborators or current students. Travel awards are very limited, so please do not submit a paper if travel to the conference is based solely on the possibility of receiving a travel award.

Instructions for Submitting a Paper 1. All presenters, discussants, chairs and session organizers must be registered for the meeting to participate. All presenting authors must pre-register for the conference by January 28 to confirm presentation. Members receive a preferred rate for annual meeting registration, and all participants are strongly encouraged to join. Learn more about PAA membership online. 2. Submissions are made online at the 2018 Annual Meeting submission website, http://www.populationassociation.org/2018program. Online submissions will open on July 24, 2017. The submission process is similar to past years. Authors are asked to submit both: a) a short abstract (150 words) to be entered online; and b) either an extended abstract (2-4 pages, including tables) or a completed paper to be uploaded to the website following instructions available online. Authors also are asked to identify who will present the paper (see below on the two-presenter rule adopted by PAA). Authors may modify their submissions online at any time until September 29, 2017. 3. Extended abstracts must be sufficiently detailed to allow the session organizer to judge the merits of the paper, including a description of the topic to be studied, the theoretical focus, the data and research methods, and the expected findings. Alternatively, authors may submit completed papers for the organizer to review. If your submission is accepted in a regular session, you must upload the full paper by April 6, 2018. 4. The PAA 2018 submission website will allow session organizers to view the titles and authors of submitted abstracts as they are received online. The author making the submission must provide the full name, affiliation, country and email address of each coauthor for each submission. 5. The author submitting the abstract must also identify the person who will present the paper. There will be an opportunity to change who the presenter is before the program is finalized (see below on PAA’s two-presenter rule). 6. As in the past, all sessions are numbered. If you wish to have your abstract considered by two organizers, you must indicate the session numbers of your first and second choices on the online submission form. This gives the first designated organizer first right of acceptance. No paper/abstract may be submitted to more than two sessions. Authors submitting a paper to regular sessions may also have their paper considered for a poster session; see below for details.

7. In addition to the 130 sessions listed in this Call for Papers, approximately 100 "overflow" sessions will be created at the request of session organizers who receive large numbers of submissions. In choosing where to submit your paper, keep in mind that session organizers with broad session titles generally end up organizing at least two or three sessions. You should send your paper to the sessions that are closest to the topic of your paper.

Instructions for Submitting a Poster 1. Members are encouraged to submit abstracts/papers for consideration as posters. All of the above instructions for abstract/paper submissions also apply for poster submissions. Authors who wish to submit their papers for consideration only for a poster session should submit their abstracts/papers to Session 1202. 2. An author who is submitting a paper to one or two regular sessions also may have the paper considered for a poster session if it is not accepted in a regular session. Authors who want their papers considered for a poster session must check "yes" in the appropriate area of the online submission form. If you do not check “yes,” your paper will not be considered for a poster.

Two-Presenter Rule The PAA Board of Directors voted to adopt a two-presentations rule for the annual meeting. Each individual may serve as the presenter for only two papers or posters (total), regardless of the number of papers and posters on which the individual is an author or co-author. Single-authored papers must be presented by the author. Each submission for inclusion on the program must indicate who will present the paper or poster. When all sessions are finalized (that is, all papers and posters have been accepted or rejected), there will be a short time interval when presenter status can be revised so that no individual presents more than twice. Individuals may serve as chair and/or discussant in addition to making two presentations, providing the opportunity for individuals to have up to four appearances in all, counting across presenter, chair, and discussant roles.

Important Dates July 24, 2017 September 29, 2017 November 16, 2017 November 27, 2017 December 14, 207 December 18, 2017 January 28, 2018 March 2, 2018 April 6, 2018

Confex opens for submissions Deadline for submitting papers or abstracts to organizers Deadline for submitting travel award applications to PAA Authors are notified of papers accepted into regular sessions Authors are notified of papers accepted into overflow sessions Authors are notified of papers accepted into poster sessions Deadline for presenting authors to preregister Deadline for making online revisions to abstracts of accepted paper Deadline for posting completed papers on the program website

If you have questions, please contact [email protected].

PAA 2018 Sessions and Organizers Click here to visit the PAA2018 program website and view a list of the Program Committee members who developed this program.

1 Fertility, Family Planning, Sexual Behavior and Reproductive Health

107 Spatial and Contextual Effects on Reproductive Health and Fertility Sebastian Klusener Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research [email protected]

101 Stalled, Reversed, and Unexpected Fertility Transitions and Trends

108 Reproductive Behavior and Sexual Health of Middle and Older Adults

Chimaraoke Izugbara Africa Population Health Research Center [email protected] 102 Fertility in Developing Countries

Nancy Luke Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

Monica Magadi University of Hull [email protected]

109 Fertility Intentions: Causes and Consequences

103 Trends, Determinants, and Consequences of Unmet Need

Heather Rackin Louisiana State University [email protected]

Jacob Adetunji USAID [email protected]

110 Abortion Abigail Aiken University of Texas [email protected]

104 Dynamics of Contraceptive Use in Developing Countries

111 Migration, Migrants, and Fertility

Megan Klein Hattori University of Massachusetts Boston [email protected]

Marta Alvira-Hammond Child Trends [email protected]

105 Contraceptive Behavior in Developed Countries

112 Reproductive Behavior and Fertility: Research on Couples

Jonathan Marc Bearak Guttmacher Institute [email protected]

Bryndl Hohmann-Marriott University of Otago [email protected]

106 Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health

113 Measurement Innovations for Studying Reproductive Behaviors and Careers

Rachel Goldberg University of California, Irvine [email protected]

Cassandra J Dorius Iowa State University [email protected] 3

114 The Union Context of Childbearing

122 Fertility, Family Planning, and Sexual Health: Programs and Policies

Christina Gibson-Davis Duke University [email protected]

Karen Hardee Population Council [email protected]

115 Men's Sexual Health and Fertility 123 Sex Preferences and Sex Composition Effects on Fertility

Gladys Martinez Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [email protected]

Nadia Diamond-Smith University of California, San Francisco [email protected]

116 Sexually Transmitted Infections, HIV, and Reproductive Health

124 Race, Ethnic, and Social Class Differences in Reproductive Health and Fertility

Giovanna Merli Duke University [email protected]

Megan Sweeney University of California, Los Angeles [email protected]

117 Contemporary and Historical Fertility Transitions Francis Dodoo Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

125 Gender, Equity, and Reproductive Health

118 Fertility Timing and Spacing

Trude Lappegard University of Oslo [email protected]

Karen Guzzo Bowling Green State University [email protected]

126 The Consequences of Fertility Timing and Context for the Subsequent Life Course Heidi Lyons Oakland University [email protected]

119 Female Education, Employment, and Fertility Jessica Huston Su University at Buffalo, SUNY [email protected]

See also: sessions 302, 412, and 416

120 Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Expression, and Reproductive Health

2 Marriage, Family, Household and Unions

Claire Kamp Dush Ohio State University [email protected]

201 Families, Health, and Well-being Hui Liue Michigan State University [email protected]

121 Low Fertility and Childlessness Gunnar Andersson Stockholm University [email protected]

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202 Families and Inequality

210 Families and Child and Adolescent Health

Molly Martin Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

Kristen Harknett University Pennylsvania [email protected]

203 Families and Work 211 Fathers and Families

Kei Nomaguchi Bowling Green State University [email protected]

Lenna Nepomnyaschy Rutgers University [email protected]

204 Family Demography: Methods and Projections

212 Family Complexity and Diversity

Jonathan Vespa U.S. Census Bureau [email protected]

Shannon Cavanagh University of Texas [email protected]

205 Time Use in Families

213 Same-Sex Unions and Family Life

Carrie Shandra SUNY Stony Brook [email protected]

Corinne Reczek Ohio State University [email protected]

206 Cohabitation and Other Nonmarital Relationships

214 Intergenerational Relationships Jennifer Bulanda Miami University (OH) [email protected]

Maggie Thorsen Montana State [email protected]

215 Interpersonal Relationships in Families 207 Union Formation

Abigail Weitzman University of Texas [email protected]

Lauren McClain Western Kentucky [email protected]

216 Gender and Families 208 Union Dissolution

Lea Pessin Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

Sheela Kennedy University of Michigan [email protected]

217 Parental Well-being

209 Families, the Law, and Public Policy

Laura Bernardi University of Lausanne [email protected]

Benoit LePlante Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique [email protected]

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218 Families, Social Media, and Technology

307 The State, Social Policy, and Child Wellbeing Sarah Font Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

Heidi Lyons Oakland University [email protected] See also: sessions 112, 114, 303, 305, 310, 404, 428, 501, 505, 608, and 704

308 Adverse Childhood Experiences and Resilience Kristin Moore Child Trends [email protected]

3 Children and Youth 301 School and Peer Influences on Child Well-Being

309 Social Contexts (Race/Ethnicity, SES, Sexual Identity) and Child and Adolescent Well-being

Clea McNeely University of Tennessee, Knoxville [email protected]

Amy Hsin Queens College, CUNY [email protected]

302 Adolescent Risky Behaviors and WellBeing

310 Parental Influences on Child and Adolescent Outcomes

Callie Burt University of Washington [email protected]

Jennifer Augustine University of South Carolina [email protected]

303 Family Diversity and Child Well-Being Sharon Bzostek Rutgers University [email protected]

See also: sessions 106, 210, 211, 218, 416, 417, 418, 419, 501, and 608

304 Transitions to Adulthood

4 Health and Mortality

Monica Longmore Bowling Green State University [email protected]

401 Trends and Causes of Adult Mortality in the United States

305 Child Wellbeing in the Era of Mass Incarceration

Anna Zajacova Western University [email protected]

Anna Haskins Cornell University [email protected]

402 Social and Spatial Disparities in Disability

306 Neighborhood and Community Effects on Child Wellbeing

Neil Mehta University of Michigan [email protected]

Corina Graif Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

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403 Spatial Distribution of Diseases and Mortality

411 The Life Course and Population Health Miles Taylor Florida State University [email protected]

Johnelle Sparks University of Texas at San Antonio [email protected]

412 Gender, Sexuality, and Population Health

404 Social Contexts, Social Connectedness, and Health

Mieke Beth Thomeer University of Alabama, Birmingham [email protected]

Andrew London Syracuse University [email protected]

413 Race, Ethncity, and Population Health 405 Causes and Consequences of Rising Midlife Mortality and Morbidity in the U.S.

Michael McFarland Florida State University [email protected]

Dustin Brown Mississippi State University [email protected]

414 Psychosocial Factors and Population Health

406 Deaths and Diseases of Despair: Drugs, Alcohol, and Suicide

Krysia Mossakowski University of Hawaii at Manoa [email protected]

Shannon Monnat Pennsylvania State University [email protected]

415 Recent Developments in Biodemography Belinda Needham University of Michigan [email protected]

407 Health and Mortality along the RuralUrban Continuum Lynne Cossman West Virginia University [email protected]

416 Maternal and Infant Health and Mortality in the U.S. Nancy Reichman Rutgers University [email protected]

408 Continuing Health Consequences of the Great Recession E. Helen Berry Utah State University [email protected]

417 Adolescent Risk Behaviors and Health Carolyn Halpern University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [email protected]

409 Religion, Spirituality, and Health Terrence Hill University of Arizona [email protected]

418 Child Health Disparities: Determinants and Policy Approaches Marianne Hillemeier Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

410 Debt, Financial Hardship, and Health Patricia Drentea University of Alabama, Birmingham [email protected]

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419 Schools, School Discipline, and Child Health and Well-Being

427 Gene-Environment Interplay in Population Health

George Farkas University of California, Irvine [email protected]

Ben Domingue Stanford University [email protected]

420 Demography of Health Care and Health Care Reform

428 Intergenerational Processes in Population Health

Timothy Waidmann Urban Institute [email protected]

Elaine Hernandez Indiana University - Bloomington [email protected]

421 Environmental Influences on Health

429 Detailed Morbidities and Causes of Death - Sociodemographic Influences

Katrina Mullan University of Montana [email protected]

Jonathan Daw Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

422 Racial, Ethnic, and Socioeconomic Disparities in Mental Health

430 Discrimination and Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Health

Cynthia Colen Ohio State University [email protected]

Bridget Goosby University of Nebraska - Lincoln [email protected]

423 Neighborhood Processes in Health

See also: sessions 106, 107, 108, 115, 116, 122, 201, 210, 302, 607, 801, 905, and 906

Francesco Acciai Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

5 Gender, Race and Ethnicity 424 Creative Measurement Strategies in Population Health Research

501 Race/Ethnicity and Family

Jacob Cheadle University of Nebraska – Lincoln [email protected]

Kelly Raley University of Texas at Austin [email protected]

425 Biomarkers in Population Health Research

502 Income and Wealth Inequality and Gender

Jennifer Beam Dowd King's College London [email protected]

Matthew Painter University of Wyoming [email protected]

426 Health Lifestyles

503 Gender Ideologies, Social Policy, and Demographic Outcomes

Adrianne Frech University of Akron [email protected]

Daniel Carlson University of Utah [email protected] 8

504 Race/Ethnicity and the 2020 Census

604 High Skilled Migration

Carolyn Liebler U of Minnesota [email protected]

Neil Ruiz Pew Research Center [email protected]

505 Residential Attainment across Gender, Race/Ethnicity, and Family Forms

605 Migration Policy, Enforcement and Settlement

Samantha Friedman University at Albany, SUNY [email protected]

Jacqueline Hagan University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [email protected]

506 Gendered Inequality and Women’s Empowerment over Time

606 Immigration and Religion Jen'nan G Read Duke University [email protected]

Jeffrey Hayes Institute for Women’s Policy Research [email protected]

607 Immigrant Health & Mortality 507 International Perspectives on Gender and Race/Ethnicity

Zoya Gubernskaya University at Abany, SUNY [email protected]

Lisa Sun-Hee Park University of California, Santa Barbara [email protected]

608 Immigrant Familes and Children Kelly Balistreri Bowling Green State University [email protected]

See also: sessions 115, 119, 124, 125, 213, 216, 309, 412, 413, 422, 430, 502, 609, 708, and 710

609 Gender and Migration

6 Migration and Urbanization

Yuying Tong Chinese University of Hong Kong [email protected]

601 International Migration Jack DeWaard University of Minnesota [email protected]

610 Immigrant Incorporation

602 Transnational Communities

Liz Ackert University of Texas at Austin [email protected]

Jenjira Yahirun Univesity of Hawaii at Manoa [email protected]

Mao-Mei Liu Brown University [email protected] 611 Internal Migration

603 Forced Migration

Kevin Thomas Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

Michael White Brown University [email protected]

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612 Residential Segregation

704 Educational Assortative Mating and Inequality

Elizabeth Roberto Princeton University [email protected]

Christine Schwartz University of Wisconsin [email protected]

613 Neighborhoods, Education and Socioeconomic Well-Being

705 Geographical Variation in Social Mobility in the U.S.

William Clark University of California, Los Angeles [email protected]

Ray Swisher Bowling Green State University [email protected]

614 Urbanization 706 Mass Incarceration and Inequality in the U.S.

Greg Sharp University at Buffalo, SUNY [email protected]

Christopher Wildeman Cornell University [email protected]

615 Innovative Approaches to the Study of Migration Fernando Riosmena University of Colorado, Boulder [email protected]

707 New Findings on Inequality, Mobility, and Education from the Complete Count Census Microdata

See also: sessions 102, 111, 407, 423, 705, and 807

Steven Ruggles University of Minnesota [email protected] 708 The Long Shadow of American Slavery and Jim Crow

7 Economy, Labor Force, Education and Inequality

Lisa Cook Michigan State university [email protected]

701 Intra- and Inter-Generational Mobility Xi Song University of Chicago [email protected]

709 Inequality in Young Adulthood Vida Maralani Cornell University [email protected]

702 Public/Tax Policy and Intergenerational Mobility

710 Racial Wealth Inequality

Bradley Hardy American University [email protected]

Darrick Hamilton The New School [email protected]

703 Multigenerational Attainment Processes and Inequailty Fabian Pfeffer University of Michigan [email protected]

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711 Educational Inequality and Educational Policy

802 Innovative Data and Methods in Population-Development-Environment Research

Francisca Antman University of Colorado, Boulder [email protected]

Elizabeth Fussell Brown University [email protected]

712 Spatial Dimensions of Social and Economic Inequality

803 Food Security and Development

Brian Thiede Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

Clark Gray University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [email protected]

713 Demographic Perspectives on Changing Labor Force Participation

804 Environment and Inequality James Elliott Rice University [email protected]

Jennifer Laird University of Washington [email protected]

805 Vulnerability and Resilience in Population-Development Research and Policy

714 Education, Employment, and Demographic Outcomes in Developing Countries

Malcolm Potts University of California, Berkeley [email protected]

Parfait Eloundou-Enyegue Cornell University [email protected]

806 Population and Environment in Developing Countries

715 Poverty, Inequality, and Policy in Lowand Middle-Income Countries

Toshiko Kaneda Population Reference Bureau [email protected]

Andrew Foster Brown University [email protected]

807 Environmental Migration Katherine Curtis University of Wisconsin, Madison [email protected]

See also: sessions 119, 202, 203, 209, 305, 402, 408, 410, 418, 422, 430, 505, 612, 804, 907, and 908

See also: sessions 104, 105, 411, 421, 714, and 906

8 Population, Development and Environment

9 Population and Aging 801 Climate and Population Health Lori Mae Hunter University of Colorado, Boulder [email protected]

901 Cognitive Aging Vegard Skirbekk Columbia University [email protected]

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902 Cross-national Comparisons of Aging Patterns

10 Data and Methods

Rebecca Wong Texas A&M University [email protected]

1001 Mixed Methods in Demography Lisa Pearce University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [email protected]

903 Demography of Multigenerational Kinship

1002 Mathematical Demography

Rachel Margolis University of Western Ontario [email protected]

Joshua Goldstein University of California at Berkeley [email protected]

904 Demography of Public Policy in Aging Populations

1003 Methods for the Analysis of Human Spatial Behavior

Melissa Hardy Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

John Palmer Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona [email protected]

905 Early Life Conditions and Well-being in Late Life

1004 Advanced Spatial Analysis

Steven Haas Pennylsvania State University [email protected]

Tse-Chuan Yang University at Albany [email protected]

906 Health and Well-being of Older Adults in Developing Countries

1005 Web and Social Media Data Emilio Zagheni University of Washington at Seattle [email protected]

Christin Mair University of Maryland, Baltimore County [email protected] 907 Inequality and Aging

1006 Innovations in Program Design and Evaluation

Adriana Reyes University of Michigan [email protected]

H. Elizabeth Peters Urban Institute [email protected]

908 Older Workers and Aging Labor Markets

1007 Linked Administrative Data: Opportunities and Challenges

Amal Harrati Stanford University [email protected]

Misty Heggeness U.S. Census Bureau [email protected]

See also: sessions 108, 214, 217, 402, 411, 428, and 703

1008 Formal Demography Hui Zheng The Ohio State University [email protected]

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12 Other Topics and Poster Only Submissions

1009 Network Analysis in Demography Zack W. Almquist University of Minnesota at Minneapolis [email protected]

1201 Other Topics (Use only if no regular session is appropriate for your submission)

See also: sessions 107, 113, 204, 401, 403, 415, 425, 428, 615, 707, 712, and 802

1202 Poster Sessions John Iceland Pennsylvania State University [email protected]

11 Applied Demography 1101 Emerging Methods in Subnational Population Estimates

(Use for submissions to be considered only as posters)

Lauren Bowers U.S. Census Bureau [email protected] 1102 Population Projections and Forecasts Alexis Santos Pennsylvania State University [email protected] 1103 Applications of Applied Demography in the Private Sector Sarah Burgoyne Claritas [email protected] See also: sessions 113, 307, 415, 420, 504, 707, 711, 903, 904, 1001, 1002. 1006, 1008, and 1009

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