More Unequal or Not as Rich? Revisiting the Latin American Exception
M. De Rosa, I. Flores, and M. Morgan. Stone Center Working Paper Series. no. 53. 2022.
M. De Rosa, I. Flores, and M. Morgan. Stone Center Working Paper Series. no. 53. 2022.
In this interview, University of California-San Diego sociologist and Stone Center Affiliated Scholar Lane Kenworthy discusses his latest book, “Would Democratic Socialism Be Better?”
A new study by Stockholm University’s Arvid Lindh and the Stone Center’s Leslie McCall reveals preferences among Americans for policies that reduce pay inequality within major U.S. corporations — which in turn challenges assumptions about support for free markets.
In this interview, Ignacio Flores, a postdoctoral scholar at the Stone Center and a member of The GC Wealth Project team, discusses “The Weight of the Rich: Improving Surveys Using Tax Data” and the algorithm that he and coauthors invented during his Ph.D. years.
A new study coauthored by Stone Center postdoctoral scholar Jaquelyn Jahn finds that despite overall declines in arrests in the early months of the pandemic, the vast differences in policing experienced by residents of Black and white neighborhoods persisted.
A research spotlight on Chloe Thurston’s chapter in The American Political Economy: Politics, Markets, and Power looks at how the U.S. government’s delegation of social policy goals to the markets enables and reinforces racial inequalities.
A. Lindh and L. McCall. Socio-Economic Review. 2022.
Jessica Trounstine’s chapter in the recently published book The American Political Economy: Politics, Markets, and Power examines the ongoing impact of restrictive land use policies on inequality in metropolitan areas across the U.S.
P. E. Erfurth. Stone Center Working Paper Series. no. 50. 2022.
M. Ranaldi. The Review of Income and Wealth. vol. 68, no. 1, pp. 139–160. 2022.