Life Course
Leaders: Greg Duncan, Arnold Milstein, Sean Reardon, Gregory Walton
The Life Course RG is dedicated to advancing research on life course theory and assessing how it can contribute to reducing poverty. The research within this RG focuses on issues of toxic stress, neurodevelopment, and epigenetics. The following are a few relevant projects within this RG.
Optimal timing of interventions: It has long been argued that interventions in the earliest years of childhood have larger long-term returns that interventions in later years. Is a comprehensive test of this hypothesis now possible?
Biological mechanisms of disadvantage: We’ve all heard that poverty “gets under the skin.” There is growing debate, however, on whether this biologic embedding of poverty takes an epigenetic form. A study underway at the CPI will be an especially important entry into this debate.
Infant health and poverty: It is well known that early disadvantages at the “starting gate” parlay into later developmental disadvantages and increased risks of poverty. Are these starting-gate disparities growing larger? Using the census of U.S. birth records between 1970 and 2014, we will soon know whether they are.
Differential EITC effects: Is there a critical moment in the child’s cognitive development in which an EITC supplement is especially consequential? This question, which has long been difficult to answer, can now be taken on by linking vital statistics to administrative data for school children.
CPI Collaborators
Richard Breen |
Professor of Sociology; Fellow of Nuffield College |
University of Oxford | |
Firdaus Dhabhar |
Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences |
University of Miami | |
Greg J. Duncan |
Life Course Research Group Leader, Distinguished Professor of Education |
University of California, Irvine | |
Arnold Milstein |
Life Course Research Group Leader, Professor of Medicine, Director of Clinical Excellence Research Center |
Stanford University | |
Petra Persson |
Assistant Professor of Economics |
Stanford University |