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Shanafelt, Amy; Sadeghzadeh, Claire; Chapman, Leah; De Marco, Molly; Harnack, Lisa; Gust, Susan; Jackson, Melvin; Caspi, Caitlin – Field Methods, 2021
Natural experiments are often used for answering research questions in which randomization is implausible. Effective recruitment strategies are well documented for observational cohort studies and clinical trials, unlike recruitment methods for time-sensitive natural experiments. In this time-sensitive study of the impact of a minimum wage policy,…
Descriptors: Low Income Groups, Recruitment, Minimum Wage, Experiments
Center for Law and Social Policy, Inc. (CLASP), 2020
New Mexico is home to nearly 70,000 infants and toddlers. New Mexico families are the state's strongest asset, yet current policies aren't meeting their needs. Children's growth and development are shaped by early life experiences. Good health, secure and stable families, and positive early learning environments foster children's physical,…
Descriptors: Infants, Toddlers, Early Childhood Education, Educational Policy
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Golden, Olivia – Journal of Applied Research on Children, 2016
Safety net programs emerging from the War on Poverty and later antipoverty efforts such as Head Start, Medicaid, the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), among others have reduced poverty, and strengthened longer-term outcomes for poor children, leading to better health and greater economic…
Descriptors: Poverty Programs, Federal Programs, Low Income Groups, Children
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Lyons, Heather Z. – Career Development Quarterly, 2011
The already limited vocational prospects of low-income African Americans in New Orleans were further devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill added to the devastation, highlighting the continued vulnerability of New Orleanians seeking employment. As a result, opportunities persist for vocational practitioners…
Descriptors: African Americans, Low Income Groups, Barriers, Employment Opportunities
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What Works Clearinghouse, 2009
Summer Training and Education Program (STEP) is a summer employment, academic remediation, and life skills program intended to lower school dropout rates by reducing summer learning loss and preventing teen parenthood. The program is integrated into the federal summer jobs program and is offered during six-to-eight-week sessions in two consecutive…
Descriptors: Summer Programs, Temporary Employment, Remedial Programs, Daily Living Skills
Employment Policies Inst., Washington, DC. – 1999
In 1999, Congress for the first time, is debating a federal minimum wage hike that will affect low-skilled people who have dramatically fewer options if they cannot find work. This public policy debate has been occasioned by the new state focus on welfare reform that, to some, suggests that a state flexibility approach be applied to the minimum…
Descriptors: Adults, Federal Legislation, Labor Legislation, Low Income Groups
Shapiro, Isaac; Greenstein, Robert – 1989
Restoring the value of the minimum wage and expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) by family size could significantly reduce family poverty and "make work pay." Recent poverty policies have largely ignored those who work but still remain poor. The majority of these working poor are in their prime working years (aged 22 to 64),…
Descriptors: Employment, Family Income, Family Programs, Federal Legislation
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Haugen, Steven E.; Mellor, Earl F. – Monthly Labor Review, 1990
Examines how the numbers of workers with earnings at or below the federal minimum wage varies, depending on how the hourly earnings measure is computed. (Author)
Descriptors: Employment Statistics, Labor Force, Low Income Groups, Minimum Wage
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Carrington, William J.; Fallick, Bruce C. – Monthly Labor Review, 2001
Most workers who begin their careers in minimum-wage jobs eventually gain more experience and move on to higher paying jobs. However, more than 8% of workers spend at least half of their first 10 working years in minimum wage jobs. Those more likely to have minimum wage careers are less educated, minorities, women with young children, and those…
Descriptors: Employment Experience, Low Income Groups, Minimum Wage, Promotion (Occupational)
Anyon, Jean; Greene, Kiersten – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2007
This article argues that, although No Child Left Behind (NCLB) is not presented as a jobs policy, the Act does function as a substitute for the creation of decently paying jobs for those who need them. Aimed particularly at the minority poor like its 1965 predecessor, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, NCLB acts as an anti-poverty program…
Descriptors: Minimum Wage, Low Income Groups, Federal Legislation, Poverty
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Neumark, David; Schweitzer, Mark; Wascher, William – Journal of Human Resources, 2004
This paper provides evidence on a wide set of margins along which labor markets can adjust in response to increases in the minimum wage, including wages, hours, employment, and ultimately labor income. Not surprisingly, the evidence indicates that low-wage workers are most strongly affected, while higher-wage workers are little affected. Workers…
Descriptors: Minimum Wage, Labor Market, Working Hours, Employment
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Sternlieb, Stevens; Bauman, Alvin – Monthly Labor Review, 1972
Low-paid workers are defined as the lowest paid one-fourth of nonsupervisory employees in private industry in the nonfarm economy, mostly in service and retail industries, not covered by union or other labor standards, and concentrated in the South. (MF)
Descriptors: Employment Level, Employment Patterns, Employment Statistics, Geographic Distribution
Boskin, Michael J.; Nold, Frederick C. – 1975
Two models of the duration of stay on welfare are developed and estimated using panel data from the California Aid to Families with Dependent Children AFDC panel survey. The first model characterizes the distribution of length of stay on welfare as drawn from the lognormal distribution with a truncation at the duration of the experiment (sixty…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Low Income Groups, Minimum Wage, Models
Mincy, Ronald B. – 1988
Most economists agree that the difficulties of targeting minimum wage increases to low-income families make such increases ineffective tools for reducing poverty. This paper provides estimates of the impact of minimum wage increases on the poverty gap and the number of poor families, and shows which factors are barriers to decreasing poverty…
Descriptors: Economic Change, Economic Factors, Economic Research, Economically Disadvantaged
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Lave, Judith R. – Society, 1989
Written by one of three members of Institute of Medicine's Committee on Health Care for Homeless who did not sign "Health Care for the Homeless," controversial supplementary statement to Committee's report, "Homelessness, Health and Human Needs." Explains reasons for not signing and argues that health care problems of homeless…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Health Needs, Homeless People, Housing
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