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Natural Hazards Center Announces New Website

The Natural Hazards Center is happy to announce a brand new Web site designed to better display all the great content we collect and create on a regular basis—and that includes when you visit on your phone or tablet!  Among the changes, you’ll find brand new online layouts for the Observer and DR that highlight the visual aspects of the publications and let you easily share the articles you love. We also have more on our current research projects, library book reviews, and other Center activities.  New advanced search features are on the way and we’re busily creating databases of resources, so you’ll be able to find what you need simply by typing a word or two.

Twenty Years Later ~ Bosnia’s “Dayton Generation”

Ferguson Effect Explored in New, Sweeping Study

A new study, led by University of Colorado Boulder researcher David Pyrooz, finds no evidence of a widespread surge in total, violent or property crime in large U.S. cities in the aftermath of the highly publicized police shooting of Michael Brown. But the research does show the overall rate of robberies across the country has increased, as has the murder rate in certain cities.

The study – the most comprehensive of its kind to date – tests the hypothesis that the shooting of Brown, a young black man, by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri – and a string of similar incidents across the country – have led to increases in crime across the U.S., a phenomenon known as the “Ferguson effect.” Researchers analyzed monthly crime data from 81 large U.S. cities the year before and year after the events in Ferguson on Aug. 9, 2014. The results were published today online in the Journal of Criminal Justice.

“We have seen crime rates drop to historic lows over the last two decades so any potential increase in crime, especially violent crime, is of great concern,” said lead study author David Pyrooz, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Colorado Boulder. “However, the finding that crime rates are essentially unchanged means that a “Ferguson effect” cannot be singled out as the driving factor of any widespread increase in crime other than robbery.”  Read the entire CU Boulder News Center article here.

CUPC Pilot Research Grants Awarded

A central aim of the CU Population Center is to provide early support for innovative, collaborative projects with the potential to substantially advance understanding in one of CUPC’s central research themes: migration and population distribution, health and mortality, and/or environmental demography. This year, four outstanding projects were supported – combined, they represent a variety of disciplinary perspectives and will make important contributions to science and human well-being. The recipients include:

  • Jill Litt, Environmental Studies, "A Pilot RCT of Gardening as an Intervention to Reduce Risk of Cancer and Heart Disease"
  • Robin Bernstein, Anthropology, "Milk: Nutrition and Health Shaped by Cultural Practices and the Environment"
  • Stef Mollborn, Sociology, "Technology Use and Health Lifestyles in Children and Youth"
  • Stefan Leyk, Geography, "Evaluating Fine-Resolution Spatial Settlement Layers for New Forms of Data-Intensive Demographic Research Under Uncertainty"

“Young, Black, and (Still) In the Red…” Accepted for Publication

Dan Simon, a Sociology graduate student affiliated with the CU Population Center, is co-author on this article recently accepted for publication. 

Houle, Jason N., Fenaba Addo, and Daniel H. Simon. “Young, Black, and (Still) In the Red: Parental Wealth, Race, and Student Loan Debt.” Forthcoming, Race and Social Problems

jimi adams Authors Several New Publications

  • jimi adams and Ryan Light. 2015. “Scientific Consensus, the Law and Same-Sex Parenting.” Social Science Research 53: 300-310. 
  • jimi adams. 2015. “Using Lord of the Flies to Teach Social Networks.” Journal of Social Structure 16(8).
  • jimi adams. 2015. “AIDS in Africa.” Contemporary Sociology 44(5):591-603. 
  • jimi adams. 2015. “Glee’s McKinley High: Following Middle America's Sexual Taboos.” Network Science 3(2): 293-295.

Amanda Barrientez Receives Graduate Student Award

Amanda Barrientez (SOCY DEPT) has received a $1,000 graduate student award from the Center to Advance Research and Teaching in the Social Sciences (CARTSS) to fund her dissertation research investigating the traumatic life histories of men who were previously involved gang members and are currently incarcerated.

Amanda Barrientez and David Pyrooz Serve on Gang Reduction Panel

 Amanda Barrientez and David Pyrooz took part in an panel hosted by the Gang Reduction Initiative of Denver (GRID), a network of federal, state, and local governmental agencies, local businesses, schools, and community-based, grassroots, and faith-based organizations that has been in operation since 2010. GRID is a comprehensive model organized around prevention, intervention, suppression, and community mobilization. The panel involved academics from local universities and practitioners, including judges, corrections agencies, directors of juvenile and adult parole and probation, and city leaders. The panel was brought together to enhance academic-practitioner relationships and to gather knowledge on the current state of research related to gang dynamics.