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Children & Families

 
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Children of Immigrants: A Statistical Snapshot (Press Release)
The Urban Institute

The number and share of children with at least one immigrant parent, the percentage of children of immigrants who are U.S. citizens, and the share of children of immigrants vs. children with native parents who are poor are just some of the data this snapshot (in English and Spanish) provides.

Posted to Web: October 30, 2009Publication Date: October 23, 2009

Foreclosures in the Nation's Capital 2009 (Policy Briefs/Metropolitan Housing and Communities)
Kathryn L.S. Pettit, Mary K. Cunningham, G. Thomas Kingsley, Leah Hendey, Jennifer Comey, Liza Getsinger, Michel Grosz

This brief, a companion to the Housing in the Nation's Capital 2009 report, describes the impact of the foreclosure crisis on the Washington metropolitan region, examining the level and trends of foreclosures, outlining potential secondary effects for families and neighborhoods, and looking towards the future of the region's housing market. It concludes with policy implications in four areas: foreclosure prevention, neighborhood stabilization, recovery assistance for displaced households, and services for children in foreclosed homes.

Posted to Web: October 28, 2009Publication Date: October 28, 2009

Housing in the Nation's Capital 2009 (Research Report)
Kathryn L.S. Pettit, Leah Hendey, G. Thomas Kingsley, Mary K. Cunningham, Jennifer Comey, Liza Getsinger, Michel Grosz

This is the seventh in a series of annual reports about housing in the Washington metropolitan region. It assembles and analyzes the most current data on housing conditions in the District of Columbia and the surrounding suburbs. This year's report focuses on the impact of the foreclosure crisis on the region, examining the level and trends of foreclosures, outlining potential secondary effects for families and neighborhoods, and looking towards the future of the region's housing market. It concludes with policy implications in four areas: foreclosure prevention, neighborhood stabilization, recovery assistance for displaced households, and services for children in foreclosed homes.

Posted to Web: October 28, 2009Publication Date: October 28, 2009

Rising Tide of Foreclosures and Mortage Delinquencies Will Add Turmoil to Metro DC Housing Market and Families' Lives: Pressures Mount for Prime Loans and Minorities (Press Release)
The Urban Institute

The metropolitan Washington housing market, just beginning to stabilize at midyear, will have to deal soon with tens of thousands of additional foreclosed homes thrown onto the market, an Urban Institute study forecasts.

Posted to Web: October 28, 2009Publication Date: October 28, 2009

Children of Immigrants: Immigration Trends (Fact Sheet / Data at a Glance)
Karina Fortuny, Ajay Chaudry

This fact sheet is the first in a series of publications on children of immigrants in the United States that updates the Urban Institute's May 2006 fact sheet that described the circumstances of these children in the early 2000s. The current fact sheet examines immigration trends and finds that children of immigrants are the fastest growing segment of the nation's children population - while the number of children of natives increased by 2.1 million between 1990 and 2007, children of immigrants grew by 8.1 million accounting for 77 percent of the growth of the U.S. children population during this time.

Posted to Web: October 27, 2009Publication Date: October 20, 2009

KidsShare Data Appendix (Not Yet Published)
The Urban Institute

Posted to Web: October 15, 2009Publication Date: October 15, 2009

Growing up Hispanic: Health and Development of Children of Immigrants (Book)
Alan Booth, Nancy G. La Vigne, Nancy S. Landale, Susan McHale

Hispanics are the largest immigrant group in the United States and the largest ethnic minority group in the nation. One in five children in the U.S. has immigrant parents. These children face a range of challenges, often caught in their communities’ changing social, political, and economic forces.

Posted to Web: October 01, 2009Publication Date: December 01, 2009

Transitioning In and Out of Poverty (Fact Sheet / Data at a Glance)
Signe-Mary McKernan, Caroline Ratcliffe, Stephanie R. Cellini

Slightly more than half of the U.S. population experiences poverty at some time before age 65. Roughly half of those who get out of poverty will become poor again within five years. Who is more likely to enter poverty? How long are people poor? And what events are associated with falling into and climbing out of poverty? This fact sheet summarizes key findings from the poverty dynamics literature to describe how, why, and when people move in and out of poverty.

Posted to Web: September 10, 2009Publication Date: September 10, 2009

How Will the Uninsured be Affected by Health Reform? (Policy Briefs/Timely Analysis of Health Policy Issues)
Lisa Dubay, Allison Cook, Bowen Garrett

In this analysis, a health reform scenario is modeled that would expand Medicaid to an estimated 17.0 million uninsured individuals with incomes up to 133 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL), would provide subsidies to 16.3 million uninsured individuals with incomes between 133 and 399 percent of the FPL, and would require an additional 4.3 million uninsured individuals to obtain coverage through an individual mandate, though they would not be eligible for Medicaid or subsidies. The first brief contains an overview of the entire nonelderly uninsured population, and the three remaining briefs address children, parents and childless adults, respectively.

Posted to Web: August 28, 2009Publication Date: August 27, 2009

Children of Immigrants: National and State Characteristics (Series/Perspectives on Low-Income Working Families)
Karina Fortuny, Randolph Capps, Margaret Simms, Ajay Chaudry

Up-to-date state information on children of immigrants is essential for social policies that affect children and families. This brief, accompanying the Urban Institute's interactive Children of Immigrants Data Tool, describes the national and state characteristics of children of immigrants based on recent American Community Survey data. Since children of immigrants account for almost a quarter (24 percent) of children under age 5, their share in the school-age population will increase, with important implications for education policy. In addition, children of immigrants' poverty and low-income rates vary across states, highlighting the importance of state and local policies in promoting children's well-being.

Posted to Web: August 26, 2009Publication Date: May 13, 2009

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