Kids Count: 2015 Data Book (Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2015)
Using an index of 16 indicators, this report ranks states on overall child well-being and in economic well-being, education, health and family and community.
Read MoreUsing an index of 16 indicators, this report ranks states on overall child well-being and in economic well-being, education, health and family and community.
Read MoreAn interim report on research done for HUD by Abt Associates finds that permanent housing subsidies improve housing stability, along with several other positive effects for homeless families.
Read MoreRacial segregation in Minneapolis and St. Paul is largely the result of charter schools and of policies that move affordable housing out of white suburbs and into segregated urban neighborhoods and first-tier suburbs, according to the University of Minnesota's Institute on Metropolitan Opportunity.
Read MoreNew research from Children’s HealthWatch illustrates there is no safe level of homelessness. This 2015 NHC Policy Brief provides an analysis of the findings.
Read MoreThis 2014 white paper by the Center of Budget and Policy Priorities examines how housing location can make a difference in economic and educational opportunity for children.
Read MoreThis Minnesota Institute of Race and Poverty report reveals the extent of school segregation in the Twin Cities region and describes segregation’s harms to children and the region.
Read MoreThis Urban Institute research brief takes a look at the effects childhood poverty has on individuals when they reach adulthood.
Read MoreAmerica in 2015 is based on a nationwide survey of 1,201 adults conducted during January 2015. Survey responses are categorized by generation as well as by ethnicity, income, and location. The responses are weighted to be representative of the U.S. population. The report builds on findings from America in 2013, published by ULI in May 2013.
Read MoreThe Family Options Study’s Interim Report details the baseline characteristics of the families in HUD's study on family homelessness, preliminary enrollment information, and the interventions that were offered.
Read MoreThe Denver Child Study explores the extent to which multiple dimensions of neighborhood context affect the physical and behavioral health, exposure to violence, risky behaviors, education, youth and young adult labor market outcomes, and marriage and childbearing of Latino and African-American children and youth from low-income families.
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