Racial and Ethnic Disparities: Essential Workers, Mental Health, and the Coronavirus Pandemic [0.03%]
种族和民族差异:基本工作人员,心理健康以及冠状病毒大流行
Jevay Grooms,Alberto Ortega,Joaquin A-A Rubalcaba et al.
Jevay Grooms et al.
Evidence is emerging of the pandemic disproportionately impacting communities of color. This study investigates mental health distress among essential workers during the coronavirus pandemic across race and ethnicity. We evaluate individual...
Seeing Covid-19 Through a Subprime Crisis lens: How Structural and Institutional Racism Have Shaped 21st-Century Crises in the U.K. and the U.S [0.03%]
透过次贷危机审视新冠疫情:结构性种族主义和制度性种族主义如何塑造21世纪的英国和美国危机
Frank Curry,Gary Dymski,Tanita J Lewis et al.
Frank Curry et al.
This special issue aims to use historical examples to gain insight into the socio-economic impact of, and possibilities of recovery from, the Covid-19 pandemic for Black communities. We approach this question by comparing the impact of the ...
Economic Inequality, the Digital Divide, and Remote Learning During COVID-19 [0.03%]
新冠疫情下的经济不平等、数字鸿沟与远程学习
Dania V Francis,Christian E Weller
Dania V Francis
Wealth and education establish a cycle of intergenerational inequality. Wealthier households can provide more educational opportunities for their children, who then will have more chances to build wealth for themselves. The digital divide m...
The Organizational Impact of Presenteeism among Key Healthcare Workers due to the COVID-19 Pandemic [0.03%]
2019冠状病毒病大流行下医护人员带病工作对组织的影响
Shelley I White-Means,Carol L Warren,Ahmad Reshad Osmani
Shelley I White-Means
#ChinaMustexplain: Global Tweets, COVID-19, and Anti-Black Racism in China [0.03%]
#中国必须解释:全球推特用户、新冠肺炎疫情与中国的反黑人种族主义
Anwar Ouassini,Mostafa Amini,Nabil Ouassini
Anwar Ouassini
One of the consequences of the emergence of COVID-19 has been the glaring racial and ethnic disparities that have defined the course of the spread of the virus. As a recent migrant-minority community in China, the Black community's experien...
The Production of Black Ph.D.'s in Economics at Harvard University, 1905-1955 [0.03%]
1905至1955年哈佛大学经济学博士毕业生中的非洲裔美国人
Samuel L Myers Jr
Samuel L Myers Jr
Harvard University's Economics Department produced some of the leading African American economists between World War I and the Korean War. This essay explores the factors that contributed to this accomplishment and documents the career traj...
Samuel L Myers Jr,Ana M Cuesta,Yufeng Lai
Samuel L Myers Jr
This paper provides compelling evidence of an inverse relationship between competitive swimming rates and drowning rates using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data on fatal drowning rates and membership rates from USA Swimm...
C S Meyer,S Mukerjee
C S Meyer
Black abortion demand [0.03%]
黑人堕胎需求
M H Medoff
M H Medoff