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TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
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DTSTART:19450814T190000
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END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20240830T122251Z
DESCRIPTION:Research on immigrant integration during the early twentieth c
 entury has predominantly focused on the outcomes of white European immigr
 ants\, often neglecting the experiences of black migrants from the U.S. S
 outh and the Caribbean who settled in cities like New York. Indeed\, few 
 studies have examined whether immigrant integration was racially patterne
 d during this period. Using complete count U.S. census data from 1910 to 
 1940\, I show that the social and economic integration of black migrants 
 markedly differed from those of white European immigrants. These findings
  add new insights into the prevailing narratives of immigrant integration
  during this era. I also highlight how black immigration has influenced c
 ontemporary disparities between black and white populations in the United
  States.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20240830T141045Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241017T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T141045Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Rethinking the Past and Future of (Im)migrant Integration
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0191-a33d07ba-00004d23demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/rethinking-past-and-present-
 immigrant-integration
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Tod Hamilton - Princeton University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20240830T122411Z
DESCRIPTION:Most research on housing and health focuses on housing afforda
 bility and stability\, although housing quality remains an important dete
 rminant of child health disparities. Federal housing assistance programs\
 , particularly public housing\, have received recent criticism for qualit
 y concerns\, especially those related to lead. We use NHANES data linked 
 to HUD administrative records and a quasi-experimental approach to study 
 the effects of housing assistance programs on blood lead levels. We find 
 that current housing assistance recipients have significantly lower blood
  lead (1.06 µg/dL) than those who would enter within 2 years (1.21 µg/dL)
 \, a 12% reduction. This protective effect was strongest for public housi
 ng (20% reduction)\, and for non-Hispanic white individuals (21% reductio
 n). These findings indicate not only that housing assistance can be a val
 uable means to reduce lead exposure. Additionally\, public housing appear
 s to receive a greater amount of criticism about quality concerns than ma
 y be warranted given actual quality.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20240830T122411Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241024T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T122411Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Understanding the Structural Determinants of Population Health: Ho
 using Assistance and Lead Exposure in the United States
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0191-a33e4167-00004d25demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/understanding-structural-det
 erminants-population-health-housing-assistance-and
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Andy Fenelon -  University of Minnesota
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20240830T122500Z
DESCRIPTION:The allocation of resources within the household has been exte
 nsively theorized\, but empirical evidence on this topic has been very sc
 arce. Endogeneity concerns hinder this type of analysis due to the lack o
 f identifying variation within the household. In this paper\, we overcome
  these difficulties by exploiting a unique setting that introduced random
  variation in resource allocation within households. We evaluate the effe
 cts of a program that provided alternative delivery methods of conditiona
 l cash transfers in Bogotá\, Colombia\, and allocated resources at the st
 udent level. The individual randomization implied that some households ha
 d treated and untreated siblings\, allowing us to extend the analysis to 
 estimate spillover effects of the program on beneficiaries and their sibl
 ings. Students were randomly allocated to a standard design and a design 
 that prioritized enrollment in tertiary education. We find that standard 
 delivery methods increase educational outcomes for treated children but d
 ecrease the same outcomes for untreated siblings of treated students. We 
 rationalize the results by estimating a structural model that uses the st
 andard delivery method for estimation and the alternative delivery method
  for validation.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20240830T122604Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241031T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T122604Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Compensation vs. Reinforcement: Experimental Identification of Par
 ental Aversion to Inequality in Offspring
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0191-a33f016e-00004d26demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/compensation-vs-reinforcemen
 t-experimental-identification-parental-aversion
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Felipe Barrera-Osorio - Vanderbilt University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20240830T122551Z
DESCRIPTION:The US gender pay gap has narrowed substantially since 1980\, 
 but more slowly since 1990. We ask how these trends have been shaped by t
 he combination of changes in gender pay gaps upon labor market entry and 
 changes in how gender pay inequalities evolve across the life course. We 
 find that young women in later cohorts consistently gained ground in pay 
 relative to their male peers. Later cohorts of women launched their caree
 rs from more advantageous starting points\, and these gains in starting p
 oints suffice to explain the entire narrowing of the cross-sectional gend
 er pay gap 1980-2020. By contrast\, changes across cohorts in the gender 
 gap in wage growth with age were mixed and offsetting. Together\, our res
 ults help shed light on both progress toward pay parity and its stall. Fu
 rthermore\, they suggest that women are unlikely to achieve pay parity if
  future gains come only from narrowing the wage gap in young adulthood: e
 ven if young women were to reach pay parity with young men\, the aggregat
 e gender pay gap will persist as long as rates of pay growth with age do 
 not converge.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20240830T122551Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241107T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T122551Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Trends in the Gender Pay Gap: Narrowing Starting Gaps and Persiste
 nt Life-Course Divergence
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0191-a33fc73c-00004d27demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/trends-gender-pay-gap-narrow
 ing-starting-gaps-and-persistent-life-course
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Alexandra Killewald - University of Michigan
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20240830T122707Z
DESCRIPTION:This presentation highlights the recent scholarship of David F
 iglio\, who popularized the use of matched birth-school data to address p
 ublic health and education policy questions in the field of economics. Fi
 glio will present a survey of his research on early health and later educ
 ational outcomes\, as well as the use of sibling comparisons (facilitated
  by matched birth records) to study policy-relevant issues in education.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20240830T122707Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241114T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T122707Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:How population-level matched birth-school administrative records c
 an address public health and education policy questions
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0191-a340ef80-00004de8demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/how-population-level-matched
 -birth-school-administrative-records-can-address
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:David Figlio - University of Rochester
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20240830T122840Z
DESCRIPTION:On the evolutionary foundations of intra-family resource shari
 ng
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20240830T122840Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241121T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20240830T122840Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:On the evolutionary foundations of intra-family resource sharing
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0191-a34259ec-00004e49demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/evolutionary-foundations-int
 ra-family-resource-sharing
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Ingela Alger -  Toulouse School of Economics
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20241106T202854Z
DESCRIPTION:Martin Opertti (Duke) and Connor Choate (UNC) will present the
 ir latest research work. After the workshop\, there will be a happy hour 
 at Lakewood Social.\n\n\nMartin Opertti (Duke): "Expressive and Instrumen
 tal Voting: The Role of Decisiveness in Shaping Electoral Preferences."\n
  \nAbstract \nRational choice models of vote choice have long differentia
 ted between the instrumental and expressive components of voting. The exp
 ressive component suggests that expressing a preference can provide intri
 nsic benefits\, independent of the election outcome. While instrumental a
 nd expressive motives often align in electoral choices\, they can also di
 verge. In such cases\, perceptions of vote decisiveness may shape vote ch
 oice\, as these models propose that self-interest is weighed by the proba
 bility of one's vote being decisive\, whereas expressive benefits are gai
 ned regardless of the outcome. Thus\, when decisiveness is perceived as l
 ow\, expressive concerns should dominate\; however\, as decisiveness incr
 eases self-interest should become more prominent. I test this prediction 
 by using a referendum on police night raids in Uruguay\, which presents a
  trade-off between self-interest and expressive concerns for a specific g
 roup of voters. I employ a survey experiment that randomly assigns respon
 dents to either a low- or high-decisiveness condition\, with past referen
 dum data framed to describe outcomes as either decided by a large margin 
 (in vote numbers) or a narrow margin (in percentage points) and analyze w
 hether respondents show differences in vote choice.\n\n\nConnor Choate (U
 NC): "Local News and State Legislative Effectiveness."\n \nAbstract: \nNa
 tural differences in media markets in the United States lead to differenc
 es in specificity and intensity with which newspapers cover individual le
 gislators. Although past work examines how local media influences the per
 formance of whole legislatures\, less is known about influences on indivi
 dual legislators. I hypothesize that the mere prospect of intense\, speci
 fic coverage induces legislators to work harder on their constituents' be
 half. Using local newspaper circulation data from the News Deserts Databa
 se and the Alliance for Audited Media\, I investigate whether state legis
 lators perform better when they represent a media market suited to genera
 te intense and specific coverage of their legislative activities. Indeed\
 , I find that such legislators are more effective on average. Although th
 ese legislators
DURATION:PT2H
DTSTAMP:20241106T202854Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241210T153000
LAST-MODIFIED:20241106T202854Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Duke/UNC B&I Workshop
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0193-032a7672-000041dddemobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=hillygus@duke.edu:Sunshi
 ne Hillygus
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250106T142152Z
DESCRIPTION:In the years since the Great Recession\, considerable attentio
 n has been paid to declining fertility rates in the U.S. and elsewhere\, 
 with additional concern over the impact of the pandemic on childbearing b
 ehavior. It remains unclear whether changes in fertility behavior reflect
  changes in fertility goals\, rising inability to accomplish goals\, or s
 ome combination. Drawing from multiple theories\, I investigate how well-
 being\, broadly defined\, factors into fertility goals (an umbrella term 
 that includes\, but is not limited to\, childbearing desires and intentio
 ns) in an era of growing uncertainty. These indicators capture domains of
 ten ignored in prior research or that tap into perceptions and subjective
  evaluations of well-being\, distinct from standard objective measures of
  sociodemographic and economic characteristics. All other things equal\, 
 we would expect that people who do not feel confident about their lives a
 nd futures in various domains\, regardless of their objective statuses\, 
 will be unlikely to have strong and positive fertility goals. I provide a
 n overview of several in-progress projects using different U.S. datasets 
 that test this basic assertion.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250106T162924Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250116T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250106T162924Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Fertility Decision-Making in the U.S. in an Era of Uncertainty
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-3bfe5b20-00007441demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/index.php/news-events/events/fertility-decision
 -making-us-era-uncertainty
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Karen Guzzo - UNC Chapel Hill
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Karen Guzzo
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Karen Guzzo_20250106042924PM.png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Karen Guzzo_20250106042924PM
 -thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250106T161214Z
DESCRIPTION:This talk describes key facets of the immune system and its re
 lations to adverse social conditions\, followed by an exploration of soci
 al and immune complexity. By examining the links between social condition
 s and immune system processes\, particularly inflammation\, we highlight 
 how these bio-social interactions contribute to health outcome inequities
 \, focusing on Black Americans who bear the brunt of a pervasive racializ
 ed social system. This system\, embodied in a spectrum of morbidities and
  mortality risk\, interacts closely with the immune system. We reflect on
  the limitations of current paradigms employing linear models and theorie
 s contrasted with complex systems which exhibit intricate interdependenci
 es\, non-linear dynamics\, feedback loops\, self-organization\, and emerg
 ent properties. Social structures under systemic racism in the U.S.\, muc
 h like components of the immune system\, are interrelated\, dynamic\, sel
 f-reinforcing\, and adaptive\, showing signs of deep complexity. By balan
 cing current linear paradigms with conceptual and theoretical considerati
 ons of complexity\, we aim to foster new theoretical insights and methodo
 logical innovations. Recognizing the interconnected dynamics of complex s
 ystems may inspire transformative policies and interventions\, addressing
  the root causes of health disparities.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250123T191617Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250123T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250123T191617Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:From Linear to Complex: Immune System Dynamics and Health Inequiti
 es in a Racialized Society
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-3c6368a4-00007d00demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/linear-complex-immune-system
 -dynamics-and-health-inequities-racialized-society
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Bridget Goosby - University of Texas at Austin
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Bridget Goosby
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Bridget Goosby_20250106042957PM.pn
 g
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Bridget Goosby_2025010604295
 7PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250106T161432Z
DESCRIPTION:Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW\; aged 15-24 years) in 
 Sub-Saharan Africa have shouldered a disproportionate share of the global
  HIV burden for decades and currently account for 78% of incident AGYW HI
 V cases worldwide. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is increasingly availa
 ble in Southern Africa\, but existent research is mainly from clinical tr
 ials or facility-based studies. This study leverages panel data from a na
 tionally representative sample in Eswatini to examine PrEP and condom use
  patterns among AGYW. The DYnamics of Contraception in Eswatini (DYCE) st
 udy\, launched in April 2024\, has been conducting bi-weekly phone survey
 s with 319 AGYW. Using this longitudinal data\, I employ sequence analysi
 s to create meaningful HIV protection behavior groups\, based on patterns
  of PrEP use\, condom use\, and sexual activity. The results expand our u
 nderstanding of PrEP and condom use among AGYW in a real-world setting.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250123T191835Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250206T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250123T191835Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Dynamics of HIV Prevention Practices among Young Women in Eswatini
 
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-3c6580d1-00007d62demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/dynamics-hiv-prevention-prac
 tices-among-young-women-eswatini
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Abba Greenleaf - Columbia University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Abba Greenleaf
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Abba Greenleaf_20250106043029PM.pn
 g
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Abba Greenleaf_2025010604302
 9PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250106T161632Z
DESCRIPTION:People's life outcomes are rooted in their parents' and grandp
 arents' experiences\; these experiences\, in turn\, are rooted in the pla
 ces where parents and grandparents grew up. In the United States\, Black 
 (grand)parents are more likely than White (grand)parents to have grown up
  in the South\, due to the economic geography of slavery and its aftermat
 h. Intergenerational theories predict that this racial difference in sout
 hern family lineages will shape racial differences in many life outcomes.
  We test this hypothesis\, using marriage as a case study. Linking data f
 rom the Panel Study of Income Dynamics to external sources\, we document 
 that southern family lineages positively predict marriage. We trace the i
 mplications of this prediction for marriage inequalities within and acros
 s birth cohorts\, whose exposure to southern family lineages differed due
  to the Great Migration of Black families out of the South. We also provi
 de some insights into the factors driving southern lineage's positive ass
 ociation with marriage. We show how family dynamics channel historical pl
 ace-based inequalities into contemporary racial inequalities\, by combini
 ng intergenerational and contextual approaches. Other researchers could e
 mploy this combined intergenerational--contextual approach to further ill
 uminate how the past shapes the present.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250123T191657Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250213T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250123T191657Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Family Tree Branches and Southern Roots: Contemporary Racial Diffe
 rences in Marriage in Intergenerational and Contextual Perspective
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-3c67589a-00007e25demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/family-tree-branches-and-sou
 thern-roots-contemporary-racial-differences-marriage
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Deirdre Bloome - Harvard University
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Deirdre Bloome
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Deirdre Bloome_20250106043104PM.pn
 g
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Deirdre Bloome_2025010604310
 4PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250106T162208Z
DESCRIPTION:Growing restrictions on abortion in the U.S. and abroad make u
 nderstanding why undesired pregnancies occur and the role of policy in li
 miting them increasingly urgent. Consensus on these questions has eluded 
 social science for decades\, largely due to data limitations and the dear
 th of internally valid research designs. Using a randomized control trial
 \, we find that making all contraception free for uninsured women seeking
  care increases the efficacy of their chosen contraceptives and decreases
  the likelihood of undesired pregnancy. Scaling this policy nationally wo
 uld reduce undesired pregnancies by 5.9%\, abortions by 9.2%\, and save $
 1.52 billion in public expenditures in the first year. Results inform a l
 ong debate regarding the determinants of contraceptive use and effects of
  reproductive health policy in developed countries.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250210T194541Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250227T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250210T194541Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:The Cost of Contraception Limits Reproductive Autonomy: Evidence f
 rom a Randomized Control Trial
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-3c6c78fe-00007f4ademobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/cost-contraception-limits-re
 productive-autonomy-evidence-randomized-control
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Martha Bailey - UCLA
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Martha Bailey
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Martha Bailey_20250106042209PM.png
 
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Martha Bailey_20250106042209
 PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250106T162522Z
DESCRIPTION:Pharmaceutical side effects are common\, though their origins 
 are not well understood and they are generally treated as a scientific an
 d clinical nuisance.  This study advances a sociological approach to appr
 eciating the origins and consequences of side effects.  Using historical 
 data on FDA approval processes attached to information on the side effect
 s of specific drugs\, this particular study demonstrates that the frequen
 cy of side effects is strongly influenced by FDA organizational dynamics\
 , including the number of people evaluating an application\, the politica
 l demands made on the FDA at the time\, the speed of approval\, and the t
 herapeutic niche a drug will eventually fill.  These influences are compa
 rable to those of the molecule itself\, as in the difference between the 
 active and placebo arm in a clinical trial.  This talk will also address 
 the consequences of pharmaceutical side effects for understanding facets 
 of population health\, especially considering the rapid growth in pharmac
 eutical consumption.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250220T190527Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250220T190527Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:FDA Organizational Dynamics and Pharmaceutical Side Effects
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-3c6f6ca5-0000000ddemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/fda-organizational-dynamics-
 and-pharmaceutical-side-effects
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Jason Schnittker - University of Pennsylvania
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Jason Schnittker
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Jason Schnittker_20250106042522PM.
 png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Jason Schnittker_20250106042
 522PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Technology
CATEGORIES:Main
CATEGORIES:Free Food and Beverages
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250306T023052Z
DESCRIPTION:Kai Cui\nManaging Director | Head of Data Science\nNeuberger B
 erman\nKai Cui is Managing Director and Head of Data Science at Neuberger
  Berman\, where he leads the firm's data science initiatives\, applying b
 ig data\, machine learning\, and AI to global equity research and investm
 ent strategies. Before joining Neuberger Berman\, he worked on data-drive
 n long/short equity at Point72 Asset Management. Kai earned his BS from T
 singhua University and a PhD in Statistics from Duke University.\n\nWedne
 sday\, March 19\, 2025\nGross Hall 270\nSession 1:\n11:45-12:50 - A Conve
 rsation on Industry and Career Trends in Quantitative Finance *Lunch will
  be provided\nSession 2:\n1:25-2:40 pm - Quantitative Investment Strategi
 es to Math 585 Algorithmic Trading C
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250306T023052Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250319T114500
LAST-MODIFIED:20250306T023052Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:A Talk with Kai Cui\, Head of Data Science\, Neuberger Berman
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0195-694a9f68-00004c21demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Free Food and Beverages:/use
 r/public-user/Other/Free Food and Beverages
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Technology:/user/public-user
 /Topics/Technology
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp__Artsan
 dSciences_Mathematics,":Mathematics
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Kai Cui
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=david.ye@duke.edu:David 
 Ye
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:167
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:887
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:720
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Kai Cui
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:packard for Social Science Research Institute (SSRI
 ) (agrp_SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Copy of Cui (1080 x 1350 px)_2025030602305
 2AM.png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Copy of Cui (1080 x 1350 px)_2025030
 6023052AM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250106T163217Z
DESCRIPTION:Research on neighborhood inequality increasingly emphasizes th
 e need to move beyond residential-based frameworks by considering the nei
 ghborhood environments individuals visit beyond their homes. This talk ex
 amines how citywide mobility networks-structural connections within citie
 s formed by residents' routine travels between neighborhoods-offer new in
 sights into neighborhood inequality and change. Using examples at both in
 dividual and aggregate levels\, I show how mobility-based disadvantage pr
 edicts child health independently of residential factors and how segregat
 ed mobility patterns influence the likelihood of neighborhood socioeconom
 ic ascent. These findings highlight the importance of studying structural
  and spatial dynamics beyond residential boundaries to fully understand n
 eighborhood inequality and change.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250220T190552Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250320T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250220T190552Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Mobility network approaches for studying neighborhood inequality a
 nd change.
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-3c75c3b5-000006e2demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/mobility-network-approaches-
 studying-neighborhood-inequality-and-change
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Jennifer Candipan - Brown University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Jennifer Candipan
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Jennifer Candipan_20250106043218PM
 .png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Jennifer Candipan_2025010604
 3218PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Technology
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250318T171017Z
DESCRIPTION:Session 1:\n11:45-12:50 - AI and LLMs in Investment and Tradin
 g to IDS 599 / FMKT 390 \n\nSession 2:\n1:25-2:40 pm - Factor Investing S
 trategies to Math 585 Algorithmic Trading Class\n\n*Lunch will be provide
 d\n\nAlonso is Director within the Multi Asset Investments team of Panago
 ra Asset Management\, a renowned quantitative investment firm. He is resp
 onsible for quantitative model research\, development and enhancements fo
 r PanAgora's Multi Asset strategies. He is also responsible for the devel
 opment and management of the firm's Defensive Equity strategies\, includi
 ng alternative-beta and factor-based strategies. Mr. Alonso joined PanAgo
 ra from Mellon Capital Management (formerly Franklin Portfolio) where he 
 was a Quantitative Analyst primarily responsible for research and managem
 ent of Market Neutral Equity portfolios.
DURATION:PT1H
DTSTAMP:20250318T171017Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250331T114500
LAST-MODIFIED:20250318T171017Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:QFC Speaker Series
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0195-aa3c129e-0000375fdemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://datascience.duke.edu/academics/electives/quantitative-finance/
 
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Technology:/user/public-user
 /Topics/Technology
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp__Artsan
 dSciences_Mathematics,":Mathematics
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Nick Alonso
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=shanon.jacobs@duke.edu:S
 hanon Jacobs
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:280
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:20
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1863
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1075.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1583
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1055.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Nick Alonso
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:packard for Social Science Research Institute (SSRI
 ) (agrp_SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Nick Alonso_20250318051018PM.png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Nick Alonso_20250318051018PM-thumb.p
 ng
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250106T163334Z
DESCRIPTION:Social mobility over multiple generations is often lower than 
 predicted by two-generational data\, suggesting that traditional estimate
 s fail to capture long-run mobility. Using novel US data (1850-1940) that
  links over 1.7 million individuals across four generations\, we find tha
 t the economic status of great-grandchildren is strongly tied to that of 
 their great-grandparents\, with a transmission estimate of 0.43. This sug
 gests low long-term equality of opportunity in American history.  Yet thi
 s four-generation estimate is just 13% higher than predicted by two-gener
 ation estimates once we adjust for measurement error by using multiple ob
 servations per ancestor. If we ignore measurement error\, as is standard 
 in the historical literature\, the gap between four- and two-generation e
 stimates increases to 120%\, creating a false impression that two-generat
 ional estimates substantially miss the mark on long-run mobility.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250306T194511Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250403T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250306T194511Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Like Great-grandfather\, Like Great-grandson? Multigenerational Mo
 bility in American History
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-3c76ecf3-00000744demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/great-grandfather-great-gran
 dson-multigenerational-mobility-american-history
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Zach Ward - Baylor University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Zach Ward
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Zach Ward_20250106043334PM.png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Zach Ward_20250106043334PM-t
 humb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250217T150230Z
DESCRIPTION:Many of the biological measures that we use to interrogate hea
 lth risks have been developed in samples of older adults. Their associati
 on with sociodemographic characteristics and prediction of health and agi
 ng outcomes earlier in the life course is understudied. In this talk\, I 
 will provide an overview of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent
  to Adult Health (Add Health)\, with a particular emphasis on the biomark
 er collection. I introduce the methods for measuring biological age using
  blood-protein biomarkers\, DNA methylation\, and gene expression data. U
 sing these measures\, I present how such measures are distributed in midl
 ife with attention to health disparities and examine their implications f
 or midlife mortality.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250306T194531Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250417T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250306T194531Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Biological Aging in Midlife
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0195-146ea5ff-0000449cdemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/biological-aging-midlife
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Lauren Gaydosh - UNC Chapel Hill
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Lauren Gaydosh
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Lauren Gaydosh_20250217030230PM.pn
 g
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Lauren Gaydosh_2025021703023
 0PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250206T132730Z
DESCRIPTION:Racial discrimination has been found to be deleterious to Blac
 k mental health. However\, the manifestation and experience of perceived 
 racial discrimination may have changed over time\, affecting those who we
 re socialized in different eras differently. Furthermore\, the way that w
 hite Americans understand and internalize racial discrimination against w
 hite people has expanded in the years since the Civil Rights era. These g
 enerational shifts may contribute to recent overall trends in mental heal
 th outcome prevalence\, mental healthcare treatment seeking behavior\, an
 d deaths of despair across generations and between racial groups. In this
  study\, I examined how perceived racial treatment relates to subjective 
 and objective mental health indicators among non-Hispanic Black and non-H
 ispanic white adults across four generational cohorts. Preliminary result
 s reveal that among both Black and white adults\, Generation X experience
 s significantly higher odds of poor mental health outcomes compared to ot
 her generational cohorts. Among Black adults\, for only Generation X did 
 perceived poor racial treatment relate to poor mental health outcomes. Ho
 wever\, among white adults\, perceived worse racial treatment compared to
  other races was associated with worse subjective mental health outcomes 
 for all generations. Additionally\, white adults in Generation X saw an i
 ncreased predicted probability of poor subjective mental health outcomes 
 if they perceived they were treated better than other races. Better perce
 ived treatment was also associated with higher odds of diagnosed depressi
 on across all generational cohorts among white adults.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250220T190451Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250424T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250220T190451Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Perceived Racial Treatment and Mental Health Across Black and Whit
 e Generational Cohorts
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-db71b8f5-000003d5demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/perceived-racial-treatment-a
 nd-mental-health-across-black-and-white-generational
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Fatima Fairfax - Duke University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250206T132629Z
DESCRIPTION:Racial residential segregation is an important mechanism by wh
 ich structural racism drives racial health disparities. In this study\, I
  use data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) to examine the relat
 ionship between timed exposure to racially segregated census tracts and c
 ognitive decline trajectories.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250220T190437Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250424T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250220T190437Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Racial Residential Segregation and Cognitive Decline Across the Li
 fe Course
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0194-db70c9e6-000003d4demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/racial-residential-segregati
 on-and-cognitive-decline-across-life-course
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Isabella Bouklas - Duke University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T023156Z
DESCRIPTION:Talk title TBA.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250821T023156Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250903T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250821T023156Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:PE/PI Workshop: Valentin Figueroa (MIT)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca77f91c-00005450demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=clara.park@duke.edu:Clar
 a Park
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250820T175941Z
DESCRIPTION:Age-related conditions and declines in health\, including Alzh
 eimer's disease\, represent some of the most urgent challenges in populat
 ion aging research. Growing evidence suggests that these conditions begin
  developing decades before clinical symptoms appear. This presentation wi
 ll introduce the new Add CAPS (Cognitive Assessment\, Physical function\,
  and Sensory function) measures from Wave VI of the National Longitudinal
  Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health)\, designed to address k
 ey gaps in understanding early and midlife risk factors for cognitive\, p
 hysical\, and sensory decline. We will also present findings from Add Hea
 lth data that highlight the significance of early Alzheimer's disease ris
 k factors for cognitive function in early midlife. Together\, this work u
 nderscores the importance of a life-course approach to identifying and ul
 timately preventing age-related conditions and declines later in life.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250821T175516Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250904T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250821T175516Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Midlife Matters: Decoding the Drivers of Brain Health and Healthy 
 Longevity
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-c8a2ff21-00003b8bdemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/midlife-matters-decoding-dri
 vers-brain-health-and-healthy-longevity
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Allison Aiello - Columbia University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1922
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1281.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1922
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1281.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Allison Aiello
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Allison Aiello_20250820055924PM.jp
 g
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Allison Aiello_2025082005592
 4PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250820T180107Z
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jessie Tenenbaum\, former Chief Data Officer for the North
  Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (NC DHHS)\, will share 
 best practices and lessons learned from leading statewide efforts to mode
 rnize data governance and infrastructure. Now at Duke\, she is applying t
 hese insights to strengthen data stewardship\, foster collaboration\, and
  expand access to data for research. In partnership with the NC Health In
 formation Exchange Authority (NC HIEA\, aka NC HealthConnex)\, she is hel
 ping to shape the vision for a Health Data Utility (HDU) in North Carolin
 a - an enhanced version of a health information exchange that not only co
 nnects clinical data for direct patient care\, but also integrates data o
 n social determinants\, behavioral health\, and other non-clinical factor
 s to support public health\, research\, and whole person care. This talk 
 will highlight strategies for overcoming policy and technical barriers to
  data sharing\, building stakeholder trust\, and leveraging North Carolin
 a's emerging data assets to accelerate whole person health.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250820T180107Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250911T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250820T180107Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:From Government to Governance: The Art of Sharing Data Without Los
 ing Trust
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-c8a44d78-00003b8cdemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/government-governance-art-sh
 aring-data-without-losing-trust
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Jessie Tenenbaum - Duke University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1915
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1276.6666666666667
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1915
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1276.6666666666667
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Jessie Tenenbaum
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Jessie Tenenbaum_20250820060107PM.
 jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Jessie Tenenbaum_20250820060
 107PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T021114Z
DESCRIPTION:Jon Green will present\, "How to Think About (and Study) Polit
 ical Podcasts."
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250912T191351Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250917T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T191351Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:B&I Workshop: Jon Green (Duke)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca65062a-000053e4demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=jon.green@duke.edu:Jon G
 reen
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T021255Z
DESCRIPTION:Turgut Keskinturk (Duke) will present his talk\, "Generational
  Imprinting: How Political Events Shape Cohorts." \n\nAbstract:\nHow\, an
 d for whom\, do political events translate into enduring political change
 ? This article advances a three-stage model of cohortization\, in which s
 alient events produce age differential changes in attitudes\, elite cues 
 drive identity-congruent political sorting\, and life-course timing regul
 ates whether these attitude changes remain persistent over time. Focusing
  on the killing of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter protests in th
 e summer of 2020 as a quasi-natural experiment\, I test this model by ana
 lyzing attitudes toward U.S. law enforcement among non-Hispanic White Ame
 ricans using five surveys that collectively span from 2016 to 2024. The f
 indings consistently show that Democrats and Independents became strongly
  unfavorable toward law enforcement-much more so among younger than older
  individuals. Moreover\, the changes persisted for younger individuals\, 
 while fading among older individuals\, leading to cohort-led polarization
 . This article integrates two classic-though largely partial-theories of 
 political learning\, offering a model for understanding how salient event
 s can realign generational divides.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250923T191349Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250924T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250923T191349Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:B&I Workshop: Turgut Keskinturk (Duke)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca668ed7-000053e5demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL= jon.green@duke.edu:Jon 
 Green
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T021421Z
DESCRIPTION:Howard Lavine (Minnesota) will present his talk\, "Status Thre
 at: The Core of Reactionary Politics." \n\nAbstract: \nI argue that the i
 lliberal turn in American politics is governed by a process in which "her
 itage" or "real" Americans believe themselves displaced by social change 
 and seek a return to the hierarchy of the status quo ante. The impetus fo
 r this investigation is that inequality based on differences in esteem an
 d respect (i.e.\, status)-alongside those based on resources and power-is
  a driving force in the psychology of politics. I propose that status-bas
 ed concerns work both as an individual-level  motivation for political be
 havior as well as a broader orientation toward reversing progressive refo
 rm. Status threat is triggered when the composition of American identity 
 is challenged through   demographic or social change\, or when policies f
 avoring groups generally excluded from the cultural majority threaten to 
 upset the way of life of the dominant group. In this presentation\, I wil
 l focus-though not exclusively-on the link between status threat and supp
 ort for democratic backsliding.\n\n\n   
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250928T202021Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251001T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250928T202021Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:B&I Workshop: Howard Lavine (Minnesota)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca67e0ca-000053e6demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=jon.green@duke.edu:Jon G
 reen
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250825T142700Z
DESCRIPTION:A growing body of research provides evidence of extensive econ
 omic and health disparities faced by migrant farmworkers and their famili
 es\, underscoring the need for livable wages\, health insurance\, and bet
 ter working conditions. Recent programs\, such as the Fair Food Program (
 FFP) initiated by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers\, have provided paym
 ent to workers from corporate-purchased premiums\, yet no studies have ex
 plored the impacts of such programs on the health of the communities they
  target. In this study\, we investigate whether implementing the FFP prom
 oted health in farmworker communities by evaluating changes to infant hea
 lth outcomes. Using restricted birth records data from the National Vital
  Statistics Systems from 2006 to 2018\, we show that adopting the FFP was
  associated with reductions in low-weight births among foreign-born mothe
 rs from Latin America. These results underscore how strengthening labor a
 nd employment conditions for birthing parents may mitigate potential long
 -term or latent adverse health outcomes among US-born children.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250825T142700Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251002T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250825T142700Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Worker-Driven Social Responsibility and Infant Health: Evidence fr
 om the Fair Food Program
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-e1a013d8-00001f36demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/worker-driven-social-respons
 ibility-and-infant-health-evidence-fair-food-program
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Joaquin Alfredo-Angel Rubalcaba - UNC Chapel Hill
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1920
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1280
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1920
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1280
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Joaquin Alfredo-Angel Rubalcaba
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Joaquin Alfredo-Angel Rubalcaba_20
 250825022700PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Joaquin Alfredo-Angel Rubalc
 aba_20250825022700PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:United States Focus
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Technology
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=2c918083-76e5856b-0176-fcc4fbb6-00005122:Jacobs\, S
 hanon
CREATED:20250929T130435Z
DESCRIPTION:Managing Risk in a World on Edge\n\nDr. Yang Chen will share i
 nsights on how BlackRock\, managing \n$14 trillion in assets\, navigates 
 today's complex risk environment. \nDr. Chen will also reflect on his car
 eer journey\, offering advice and perspective for those considering caree
 rs in quantitative finance.\n\nDr. Chen is Managing Director at BlackRock
 \, leading the U.S. Fixed Income Risk and Quantitative Analysis Group. Wi
 th more than 25 years of experience across both sell-side and buy-side in
 stitutions\, he brings deep expertise in investment research and risk man
 agement. He holds a Ph.D. in Statistics from Duke University and an MBA f
 rom NYU Stern. Dr. Chen also serves on the Duke Graduate School Board of 
 Visitors.
DURATION:PT1H
DTSTAMP:20250929T130435Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251003T150000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250929T130435Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Quantitative Finance Speaker Series
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0199-959333d6-000054aedemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://datascience.duke.edu/academics/electives/quantitative-finance/
 
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Technology:/user/public-user
 /Topics/Technology
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=United States Focus:/user/pu
 blic-user/Topic of Event Focused on a Country or Continent (if applicable
 )/United States Focus
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp__Artsan
 dSciences_Mathematics,":Mathematics
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Yang Chen
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:212
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:8
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1820
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1608
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1072
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Yang Chen
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:packard for Social Science Research Institute (SSRI
 ) (agrp_SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Yang Chen_20250929010435PM.png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Yang Chen_20250929010435PM-thumb.png
 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Business
CATEGORIES:Climate
CATEGORIES:Energy
CATEGORIES:Sustainability
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CATEGORIES:Free Food and Beverages
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250917T174052Z
DESCRIPTION:Current Duke students are invited to join our first Power Lunc
 h of the fall 2025 semester featuring Dana Robbins Schneider\, Senior Vic
 e President\, Director of Energy and Sustainability at Empire State Realt
 y Trust\, with discussion to follow. Lunch will be provided\; <a href="ht
 tps://duke.is/oct7power">advance registration is required</a>. Event capa
 city will be limited so that all attendees have the chance to introduce t
 hemselves\, ask questions\, and exchange ideas.\n\nA LIMITED NUMBER OF TI
 CKETS ARE AVAILABLE\, so please register only if you are committed to att
 ending. If your plans change\, please cancel your registration so someone
  else can take part.\n\n \n\nSPEAKER BIO\nDana Robbins Schneider is Senio
 r Vice President\, Director of Energy and Sustainability for Empire State
  Realty Trust. Dana is responsible to define\, lead\, and execute a compr
 ehensive program for all company and property level energy and sustainabi
 lity initiatives\, industry leading best practices\, wellness programs\, 
 disclosure\, and reporting. Dana leads the work behind ESRT's globally re
 cognized Net Zero work\, for ESB by 2030 and the portfolio by 2035\, focu
 sed on analyzing and implementing actionable measures which drive perform
 ance and payback at the whole building\, systems and tenant level includi
 ng proactive planning for LL97. We focus on measurable actionable impacts
  in emissions\, energy\, water\, waste\, and indoor environmental quality
  to drive ROI and healthy buildings.\n\nPrior to joining ESRT\, Dana led 
 JLL's Energy and Sustainability Projects team for the Americas\, working 
 on over 250 million square feet of impact projects over 18 years. Before 
 this\, Dana was a mechanical engineer at WSP.\n\nDana graduated Phi Beta 
 Kappa from the University of Virginia in 1999 and serves on the Mayor's S
 ustainability Advisory Board\, Real Estate Roundtable Sustainable Policy 
 Advisory Committee\, Urban Green Board of Directors\, ULI Think Tank Comm
 ittee\, REBNY Sustainability Committee\, and is a LEED Fellow since 2016.
  Dana served on the LL97 Technical Pathways for Commercial Buildings and 
 Economic Working Group and maximum terms on the USGBC LEED Steering Commi
 ttee and USGBC Technical Advisory Group for IEQ.
DURATION:PT1H30M
DTSTAMP:20250917T174052Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251007T113000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250917T174052Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Power Lunch with Dana Robbins Schneider
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0199-58c3d3bb-000038eademobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://duke.is/oct7power
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Free Food and Beverages:/use
 r/public-user/Other/Free Food and Beverages
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Energy:/user/public-user/Top
 ics/Energy
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Sustainability:/user/public-
 user/Topics/Sustainability
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Business:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Business
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Climate:/user/public-user/To
 pics/Climate
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:-0.3333333333333144
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:353
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Flier for "Power Lunch with Dana Robbins Schneid
 er" including a skyline with the Empire State Building in the background 
 and Dana Robbins Schneider profile photo in the foreground. Text: "Power 
 Lunch with Dana Robbins Schneider\, Senior Vice President\, Director of E
 nergy and Sustainability\, Empire State Realty Trust. Tues.\, Oct. 7\, 11
 :30 AM-1 PM\, Gross Hall 270. Curious about sustainable real estate? Duke
  students\, chat with Dana about her work at Empire State Realty Trust. R
 SVP: duke.is/oct7power." Includes logo from the Nicholas Institute.
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:maf115 for Nicholas Institute for Energy\, Environm
 ent and Sustainability (agrp_NSOE_NicholasInstituteforEnvironmentalPolicy
 Solutions)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/DUKECAL-Power-Lunch-Dana-Robbins-Schneider
 _20250917054052PM.png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/DUKECAL-Power-Lunch-Dana-Robbins-Sch
 neider_20250917054052PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T023502Z
DESCRIPTION:Tanushree Goyal (Princeton) will present\, "Representation fro
 m Below: The Grassroots Origins of Women's Political Power."\n\nAbstract:
 \nAfter decades on the political sidelines\, women are now at the heart o
 f India's development agenda. Political parties are placing them front an
 d center: shaping platforms\, driving mobilization\, and crafting elector
 al appeals around their participation. Representation from Below traces h
 ow this transformation began far from the halls of power\, taking root in
  local politics and rising through party organization. It develops a new 
 theory of inclusive party-building to explain how women in local politics
  transform party organizations to increase responsiveness and advance rep
 resentation at the highest levels of politics. Drawing on fieldwork\, ori
 ginal data\, and experimental research\, the book shows how women in loca
 l politics\, responding to career incentives\, began building grassroots 
 chapters of women's wings and recruiting other women into activism\, quie
 tly reshaping party structures from the ground up. As women became indisp
 ensable to electoral mobilization\, party leaders responded strategically
 : adapting platforms\, expanding welfare schemes\, and opening paths to h
 igher office. The book challenges the view that political parties stand i
 n the way of women's empowerment\, or that women in deeply patriarchal sy
 stems lack agency. Instead\, it highlights how the very constraints and s
 paces once defined by women's marginalization: households\, gender norms\
 , and women-centered networks\, become unlikely engines of democratic cha
 nge. When parties are built inclusively from below through women's partic
 ipation\, the ripple effects extend far beyond the local level\, transfor
 ming national politics and offering lessons that resonate historically an
 d well beyond India's borders.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20251003T182049Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251008T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20251003T182049Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:PE/PI Workshop: Tanushree Goyal (Princeton)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca7ad0df-00005452demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=clara.park@duke.edu:Clar
 a Park
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T023609Z
DESCRIPTION:Masaaki Higashijima (Tokyo/UW) will present\, "Elected Leaders
  and Informal Tax Contributions: Natural Experiment Evidence from Village
  Elections in Kazakhstan."\n\nAbstract\nDo elections for local leaders bo
 ost informal tax collection and public goods provision? Existing observat
 ional and lab experiments find inconclusive effects\, with some studies s
 howing that traditional\, unelected leaders secure greater contributions.
  We combine a natural experiment-the random timing of the introduction of
  village elections in Kazakhstan-with a survey experiment to test whether
  elected leaders elicit greater citizen willingness to contribute to loca
 l projects than leaders appointed by higher authorities. We also expect s
 tronger effects among men than women. Our analysis shows elected village 
 chiefs attract greater contributions than appointed chiefs. Surprisingly\
 , the effect is more pronounced for women\, suggesting elections are part
 icularly important for encouraging women's participation in local governa
 nce. These findings indicate that elections can increase contributions in
  settings where unelected chiefs lack traditional authority and are appoi
 nted by higher entities.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20251003T182252Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251015T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20251003T182252Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:PE/PI Workshop: Masaaki Higashijima (Tokyo/UW)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca7bd55b-00005453demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=clara.park@duke.edu:Clar
 a Park
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250912T160920Z
DESCRIPTION:Recent scholarship has conclusively found that historical inci
 dents of racial violence lead to contemporary inequalities in many areas 
 of political and social life. While these findings are critically importa
 nt\, the persistence of effects from the late 19th and early 20th century
  on contemporary patterns of racial inequality in the 21st century raises
  new and pressing questions. Specifically\, if violent acts can produce d
 eep and lasting disparities in areas like housing segregation and impriso
 nment\, can anti-racist mobilization counter these effects? We investigat
 e whether-and in what ways-mobilization during the Civil Rights Movement 
 disrupts or reinforces the legacies of racial violence across key areas i
 ncluding housing\, imprisonment\, arrests\, and education. Building on fo
 ur widely cited studies of legacy effects\, we incorporate measures of pr
 otest during the peak years of the Civil Rights era. We find that backlas
 h effects intensify inequality across most domains and analyze how these 
 patterns vary\, offering new insights into the durability of racial viole
 nce legacies and the complex pathways through which they may-or may not-b
 e disrupted.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250912T160920Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251016T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T160920Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Legacies of Violence\, Mobilization\, and Contemporary Inequality
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0199-3eb03aa6-00007a08demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/legacies-violence-mobilizati
 on-and-contemporary-inequality
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Sarah Gaby - UNC Wilmington
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1914
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1276
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1914
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1276
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Sarah Gaby
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Sarah Gaby_20250912040920PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Sarah Gaby_20250912040920PM-
 thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T021535Z
DESCRIPTION:Talk title TBA.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250821T021535Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251022T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250821T021535Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:B&I Workshop: Brian Guay (UNC)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca690121-000053e7demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=jon.green@duke.edu:Jon G
 reen
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250912T161057Z
DESCRIPTION:This paper examines the impact of cultural diversity on innova
 tion. Focusing on the United States from 1850 to 1940\, we develop a nove
 l surname-based measure of cultural diversity and combine this with paten
 t data. Leveraging quasi-random variation in counties' surname compositio
 ns driven by historical immigration\, we find that rising diversity incre
 ased both the quantity and quality of innovation within counties and for 
 individual inventors. Examining mechanisms\, we provide evidence suggesti
 ng that greater surname diversity accelerated innovation both by expandin
 g the range of ideas\, skills and perspectives available for recombinatio
 n and by fostering the diverse social interactions that facilitate idea s
 haring.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250912T161057Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251023T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T161057Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:How Cultural Diversity Drives Innovation: Surnames and Patents in 
 U.S. History
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0199-3eb1b4b2-00007a6bdemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/how-cultural-diversity-drive
 s-innovation-surnames-and-patents-us-history
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Jonathan Shulz - George Mason University
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1918.5
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1279
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1918.5
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1279
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Jonathan Shulz
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Jonathan Shulz_20250912041057PM.jp
 g
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Jonathan Shulz_2025091204105
 7PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T023722Z
DESCRIPTION:Jeff Jensen (NYU AD) will present his talk\, "The Strategic Or
 igins and Political Consequences of Post-Conflict Memorialization." \n\nA
 bstract:\nIn this paper\, we explore the causes and consequences of post-
 Civil War memorialization in the American South. Our paper is the first t
 o systematically test the claim that Confederate monuments were construct
 ed to honor the war dead\; this test is made possible by the availability
  of new micro-level estimates of Civil War mortalities. We find no associ
 ation between local wartime mortality and subsequent memorialization. Ins
 tead\, we show that monuments were disproportionately built in counties w
 ith a higher share of enslaved residents in 1860. We also demonstrate tha
 t the presence of early monuments predicted greater white supremacist mob
 ilization: more United Daughters of the Confederacy chapters in 1900-1917
 \, more Ku Klux Klan chapters in the 1920s\, and higher Democratic presid
 ential vote shares through 1928. These findings suggest that monuments in
  the aftermath of conflict are built for strategic reasons\, and that the
 ir presence has consequential effects on political behavior.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20251024T132240Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251029T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20251024T132240Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:PE/PI Workshop: Jeff Jensen (NYU AD)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca7cf076-00005454demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=clara.park@duke.edu:Clar
 a Park
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T023831Z
DESCRIPTION:Gabrielle Kruks-Wisner (UVA) will present\, "Democratizing bur
 eaucracy: How can citizens demand accountability from unelected officials
 ?" \n\nAbstract:\nHow can citizens demand better public services where re
 sources are scarce and democratic representation is limited? A common str
 ategy is to turn to unelected officials\, who are critical gatekeepers in
  the distribution of resources and policy implementation. Yet these offic
 ials are not formally answerable to citizens and often work under heavy c
 apacity constraints. We explore citizen-led efforts to demand accountabil
 ity\, combining qualitative research with a survey of personnel in a near
  census of administrative blocks in Jharkhand - one of India's poorest st
 ates. We theorize two potentially impactful strategies: personal testimon
 y to evoke empathy\, and publicity to activate officials' reputational co
 ncerns. Embedded video and vignette experiments reveal that exposure to c
 itizen testimony increases officials' attention but does not lead to acti
 on\, while threats of social media exposure increase their willingness to
  act. These findings illuminate how ordinary citizens can deploy differen
 t strategies to advance different dimensions of  bureaucratic responsiven
 ess.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20251027T183228Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251105T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20251027T183228Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:PE/PI Workshop: Gabrielle Kruks-Wisner (UVA)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca7e001c-00005455demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=clara.park@duke.edu:Clar
 a Park
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250912T161303Z
DESCRIPTION:Our framework is built on two propositions. First\, biology di
 ctates that women are sole child-bearers and primary child-rearers\, mean
 ing nearly all factors influencing fertility operate through women. Secon
 d\, despite biological differences in reproduction\, women possess inhere
 nt life aspirations that are highly similar to those of men-a motivation 
 we argue is the key individual-level driver of fertility decline. In prem
 odern societies\, however\, these aspirations were largely suppressed\, a
 nd relentless childbearing and rearing became women's destiny. As moderni
 zation advances and gives rise to gender equality\, leading to greater aw
 areness of alternative life paths and reproductive autonomy among women\,
  a sharp decline in fertility becomes inevitable. We argue that this dyna
 mic is the most fundamental driver of fertility decline. The antinatalist
  forces\, counterbalanced by enduring pronatalist ones\, have led to a la
 rgely irreversible fertility equilibrium in low-fertility countries today
 . We illustrate the explanatory power of the model-which is at once simpl
 er and more general-through several examples\, and contrast it with exist
 ing theories. Given the root cause of the fertility decline\, we advocate
  gender-equity programs as an eventual path to upwardly disrupt the curre
 nt below-replacement fertility equilibrium. Gender equity requires acknow
 ledging and fairly compensating women for their much heavier reproductive
  role.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250912T161303Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251106T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T161303Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:A Woman-Centered Biosocial Interactive Theory of Historic Fertilit
 y Decline
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0199-3eb3a32c-00007acedemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/woman-centered-biosocial-int
 eractive-theory-historic-fertility-decline
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
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 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Guang Guo - UNC Chapel Hill
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1915.5
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X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Guang Guo
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T023938Z
DESCRIPTION:Abraham Newman (Georgetown) will present\, "Further Back to th
 e Future: Neo-Royalism\, the Trump Administration\, and the Emerging Inte
 rnational System." (with Stacie Goddard)\n\nAbstract\nWith the Liberal In
 ternational Order (LIO) in decline\, scholars have focused increasingly o
 n the possible return to a Westphalian great power system marked by sover
 eigntist claims and balancing among states. Recent actions by the US gove
 rnment\, however\, raise a number of significant puzzles for such account
 s - the US seems willing to sign deals with traditional adversaries inclu
 ding Russia and China\, while targeting long standing allies like Canada 
 and Denmark. At the same time\, transactional politics often serve narrow
  personalist interests rather than national objectives. In short\, a West
 phalian lens focused on states and sovereignty may generate intellectual 
 blinders that misreads the emerging international order. To overcome thes
 e limitations\, we propose an alternative account\, which we label neo-ro
 yalism. The neo-royalist order centers on an international system structu
 red by a small group of hyper elites\, which we term cliques. Such clique
 s seek to legitimize their authority through appeals to their exceptional
 ism in order to generate durable material and status hierarchies based on
  the extraction of financial and cultural tributes. This short paper lays
  out the key elements of the neo-royalist order\, differentiating it from
  the Westphalian and Liberal International Orders\, and applies its insig
 hts to better grapple with the emerging system being promoted by the Unit
 ed States under Donald J. Trump. For policy-makers and scholars\, the neo
 royalist approach clarifies recent events in U.S. foreign policy. Theoret
 ically\, the field should take contending ideas of international order se
 riously\, and establish a research agenda beyond a backward looking view 
 to the Westphalian moment.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20251108T185607Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251112T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20251108T185607Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:PE/PI Workshop: Abraham Newman (Georgetown)\, Joint with SPC
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca7f06ce-00005456demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=clara.park@duke.edu:Clar
 a Park
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Research
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a02906b-8a0a73d8-018a-2595ec90-00003003:Simpson\, 
 Linda
CREATED:20250912T161558Z
DESCRIPTION:Climate change has been widely portrayed as dramatically resha
 ping the global migration landscape by altering the habitability and attr
 activeness of different locales. Much of the empirical evidence on the re
 lationship between climate and migration has focused on the impacts of ep
 isodic events\, such as hurricanes\, heat waves\, or droughts. However\, 
 the impacts of permanent\, slow-onset changes such as sea level rise have
  been largely overlooked. This gap is especially concerning as sea level 
 rise is projected to affect as many as 13M people in the United States al
 one by the end of the century. \n \nHere\, we integrate high-resolution a
 ddress history data on 12M individuals in North Carolina to evaluate how 
 exposure to sea level rise and hurricanes influence residential migration
  choices. Using a combination of survival analysis and linear probability
  models\, preliminary results suggest that the duration of residence in t
 he areas most exposed to sea level rise has decreased in recent years\, c
 onsistent with a recent acceleration in coastal flood frequency. Exposure
  to hurricanes alone also increases the likelihood of moving. However\, p
 ost-hurricane out-migration is lower in the areas most exposed to sea lev
 el rise than in areas unaffected by sea level rise. In all\, our results 
 provide new empirical evidence that sea level rise is beginning to affect
  migration in the lowest-lying coastal zones\, but the slow-onset impacts
  may differ than those from extreme storms.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250912T161558Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251113T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T161558Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Impacts of sea level rise and storms on residential migration in N
 orth Carolina
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0199-3eb64c58-00007acfdemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://dupri.duke.edu/news-events/events/impacts-sea-level-rise-and-s
 torms-residential-migration-north-carolina
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Research:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Research
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_SSRI,":
 Social Science Research Institute (SSRI)
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Miyuki Hino - UNC Chapel Hill
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:DUPRI Seminar Series
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1915.5
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1277
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1915.5
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1277
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Miyuki Hino
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:my109 for Duke Population Research Institute (DuPRI
 ) (agrp_DuPRI)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Miyuki Hino_20250912041558PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/cropped-Miyuki Hino_20250912041558PM
 -thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Politics
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Meeting
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250821T021649Z
DESCRIPTION:Talk title TBA.
DURATION:PT1H15M
DTSTAMP:20250821T021649Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251119T120000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250821T021649Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=8a0870ef-4078d128-0140-8383fed7-00007e8b:SSRI-Gros
 s Hall 270
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:B&I Workshop: Justin Kirkland (UVA)
UID:CAL-8a00ec8b-979413b9-0198-ca6a2053-000053e8demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Meeting:/user/public-user/Ot
 her/Meeting
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Politics:/user/public-user/T
 opics/Politics
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=jon.green@duke.edu:Jon G
 reen
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:sas136 for Political Science (agrp__ArtsandSciences
 _PoliticalScience)
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR

