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View Research by Author - Marla McDaniel
Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/MarlaMcDaniel
| Viewing 1-3 of 3. Most recent posts listed first. | | Coming of Age: Employment Outcomes for Youth Who Age Out of Foster Care Through Their Middle Twenties (Research Report)| Jennifer Ehrle Macomber, Stephanie Cuccaro-Alamin, Dean Duncan, Daniel Kuehn, Marla McDaniel, Tracy Vericker, Mike Pergamit, Barbara Needell, Hye-Chung Kum, Joy Stewart, Chung-Kwon Lee, Richard P. Barth |
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This study examines employment outcomes for youth who age out of foster care through their middle twenties in three states: California, Minnesota, and North Carolina. The study linked child welfare, Unemployment Insurance (UI), and public assistance administrative data to assess outcomes. Results suggest that youth who age out of foster care continue to experience poor employment outcomes at age 24 and generally follow one of four employment trajectories as they transition to adulthood. | Posted to Web: April 18, 2008 | Publication Date: April 01, 2008 | Five Questions for Marla McDaniel (Five Questions)Marla McDaniel is a research associate in the Labor, Human Services, and Population Center at the Urban Institute. Her research focuses on family resources, social policies, race, and their influence on child and adult health and well-being. She discusses findings from a new report written with Margery Austin Turner, "Racial Disparities and the New Federalism." | Posted to Web: October 25, 2007 | Publication Date: October 25, 2007 | Racial Disparities and the New Federalism (Discussion Papers)The paper explores how shifts in both social welfare policies and economic conditions beginning in the mid-1990s altered the relative well-being of blacks— compared to whites—between 1997 and 2002. It uses the National Survey of America's Families (NSAF) to assess how the relative well-being of black families improved or disparities persisted. The findings suggest that some of the disparities between whites and blacks narrowed between 1997 and 2002, especially among people with low incomes. But gaps in income, child school outcomes, employment, assets, and welfare and other income supports, remained essentially unchanged over the period. | Posted to Web: October 25, 2007 | Publication Date: October 25, 2007 |
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