In: Public Perceptions of Corporate Criminal Sanctions: An Empirical Study of the Reputational Impact of Corporate Criminal Misconduct, 29 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA INTERDISCIPLINARY LAW JOURNAL 457 (2020).
In: Legalization and Norm Internalization: An Empirical Study of International Human Rights Commitments Eliciting Public Support for Compliance, 7 JOURNAL OF LAW AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS 338 (2019).
In: Reputation and Compliance with International Human Rights Law: Experimental Evidence from the U.S. and South Korea, 19 JOURNAL OF EAST ASIAN STUDIES 215 (2019) (peer-reviewed).
In: Public and Elite Opinion on International Human Rights Law: Completing the Causal Chain of the Domestic Compliance Mechanism, 18 JOURNAL OF HUMAN RIGHTS 419 (2019) (peer-reviewed).
A journey toward possible selves : Korean American experiences -- Re-interpreting experiences : a possible selves homiletic solution -- Research design and methods -- Embodied and relational possible selves -- Spiritual possible selves -- Naming the invisible : themes in second generation preaching -- Toward a possible selves homiletic
AbstractThis study assesses whether teenage labor force participation may influence the food security of children in their families. We utilize the Current Population Survey annual Food Security Supplement and linked monthly core data from 2001 through 2012 to assess the year‐to‐year dynamics of food security status in families with teenagers. We estimate the effect of teenage employment on food security while controlling for all time‐invariant individual and household characteristics using a fixed‐effects model. We find that an employed teen reduces the predicted probability of a family's children having very low food security by an economically and statistically significant 50%.
Research on public health insurance expansions has typically focused on those targeted by the expansions; we estimate the spillover effects of parental Medicaid expansions on the insurance coverage of their children. Expanding parental Medicaid eligibility may increase participation by already‐eligible, uninsured children by increasing the value of Medicaid enrollment for the entire family. However, parental expansions may also generate crowd out from private coverage. Using the Survey of Income and Program Participation during a period of major parental Medicaid expansions, we find substantial effects of the expansions on the Medicaid participation of children, with evidence of crowd out among some subsamples. (JEL H51, I13, I38)