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PACEs and the Social Sciences

PACEs occur in societal, cultural and household contexts. Social science research and theory provide insight into these contexts for PACEs and how they might be altered to prevent adversity and promote resilience. We encourage social scientists of various disciplines to share and review research, identify mechanisms, build theories, identify gaps, and build bridges to practice and policy.

Tagged With "Census 2030"

Blog Post

Re post: Example of data mining to examine social policy

Dennis Haffron ·
Data mining nutrition, minorities, people with disabilities, unintended consequences
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This US Census economic data show how far we will have to go to recover.

Dennis Haffron ·
This US Census economic data show how far we will have to go to recover.
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Resource for Everyone

Dennis Haffron ·
This is the link to the census website. 
Comment

Re: Moms, Work and the Pandemic

Dennis Haffron ·
I wonder if this article is inaccurate. It may conflate sex with child care responses. I have been a stay at home grand parent care caregiver. That task greatly limited my employment choices.
Blog Post

Moms, Work and the Pandemic

Dennis Haffron ·
Around 10 million U.S. mothers living with their own school-age children were not actively working in January — 1.4 million more than during the same month last year, according to new U.S. Census Bureau data.
Blog Post

Custom Tabulation Capabilities on data

Dennis Haffron ·
US Census data users can create custom tabulations with various available Public Use Microdata sets and vintages
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The LANCET stresses Social Determinants of health

Dennis Haffron ·
Much evidence has been published supporting Pender's call for social determinants to be considered as key in understanding and treating mental illness. The Lancet Commission on global mental health and sustainable development stated that research consistently shows a strong association between social disadvantage and poor mental health. The COVID-19 pandemic has further focused attention on the importance of social determinants in causing both mental and physical illness.
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THE IFSW STATEMENT TO THE UN 60TH SESSION OF THE COMMISSION FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT (IFSW.org)

Porter Jennings-McGarity ·
The IFSW a non-governmental organization in consultative status with the Economic and Social Council issued the following statement to the UN 60th Session of the Commission for Social Development. The IFSW encompasses 146 social work associations, representing over 5 million social workers worldwide (IFSW, 2021, IFSW Statement on the Draft on the Right to Development). The mission of IFSW is to advocate for social justice, human rights, and social development through plans, actions,...
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US Census is now Measuring Community Resilience Equitably

Dennis Haffron ·
There is a new data product: CRE for Equity. The tool includes a new dashboard and data that helps users understand their communities’ social vulnerability and equity.
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Census data provides national views of what was presented in the CTIPP 01/21 health workshop

Dennis Haffron ·
People in vulnerable populations — as defined by socioeconomic characteristics — made more preventable visits to emergency rooms than others from 2013 to 2017, according to a U.S. Census Bureau working paper.
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Census Bureau Invites Public Input on Designing 2030  Census

Dennis Haffron ·
(What information should the Census Bureau be collecting and correlating in order to better identify communities at greater risk for a traumatic childhood environment.
Blog Post

An Introduction to Census Data

Dennis Haffron ·
The Census Bureau conducts over 130 surveys and provides data access to thousands of variables through dozens of data tools, a variety of data visualizations, data tables, raw data, and the Census Application Programming Interface (or API for short). Our communities can use this.
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