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View Research by Author - Bogdan Tereshchenko
Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/BogdanTereshchenko
| Viewing 1-3 of 3. Most recent posts listed first. | | Disability Onset Among Working Parents: Earnings Drops, Compensating Income Sources and Health Insurance Coverage (Discussion Papers/Low Income Working Families)This paper examines work-limiting disability using the 1996 and 2001 panels of the Survey of Income and Program Participation. Nearly 10 percent of employed parents developed or had a recurring disability over the course of the panel. For about a quarter of this group, earnings dropped by more than 25 percent of family income, with other income sources offsetting only a small fraction of lost earnings. In addition, workers who hold health insurance policies through their employer were less likely to reduce hours worked or leave their job following disability onset, effects consistent with job lock. | Posted to Web: March 25, 2009 | Publication Date: March 23, 2009 | Alcohol Outlets as Attractors of Violence and Disorder: A Closer Look at the Neighborhood Environment (Research Report)This report investigates the relationship between alcohol availability, type of alcohol establishment, distribution policies and violence and disorder at the block group level in the District of Columbia. We test whether density of alcohol outlets influences: (1) aggravated assault incidents, (2) calls for service for social "disorder" offenses, and (3) calls for service for a domestic incident, and examine variation in outcomes by time of day/day of week. Spatial econometric regression models are estimated using an information theoretic approach. The findings indicate that on-premise outlets, but not off-premise outlets are a significant predictor of aggravated assault. | Posted to Web: May 07, 2008 | Publication Date: April 28, 2008 | Impact and Cost-Benefit Analysis of the Maryland Reentry Partnership Initiative (Research Report)This study evaluates the impact of the Maryland Reentry Partnership Initiative (REP) on crime in Baltimore between 2001 and 2005. It compares 229 REP clients to a contemporaneous cohort of 370 prisoners released to non-REP neighborhoods in Baltimore City. The quasi-experimental design tests whether REP reduced the prevalence and incidence of criminal justice contact, and whether the program was cost-beneficial. REP clients committed fewer new crimes, and that REP was cost-beneficial, returning $3 in benefits per dollar in new costs. The total net benefit to the citizens of Baltimore is $7.2 million, or $21,500 per REP participant. | Posted to Web: February 08, 2007 | Publication Date: January 30, 2007 |
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