Background
Conley, Dalton was born on June 16, 1969 in New York, United States.
( Being Black, Living in the Red demonstrates that many d...)
Being Black, Living in the Red demonstrates that many differences between blacks and whites stem not from race but from economic inequalities that have accumulated over the course of American history. Property ownershipas measured by net worthreflects this legacy of economic oppression. The racial discrepancy in wealth holdings leads to advantages for whites in the form of better schools, more desirable residences, higher wages, and more opportunities to save, invest, and thereby further their economic advantages. A new afterword by the author summarizes Conley’s recent research on racial differences in wealth mobility and security and discusses potential policy solutions to the racial asset gap and America’s low savings rate more generally.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0520261305/?tag=2022091-20
(Interesting sociological commentary on race and wealth us...)
Interesting sociological commentary on race and wealth using innovative statistical methods.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B010IKHGXK/?tag=2022091-20
Conley, Dalton was born on June 16, 1969 in New York, United States.
Bachelor in Humanities, College Letters and Science, University California, Berkeley, 1990. Master in Public Policy and Administration, School International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, 1992. Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology with Distinction, Graduate School Arts and Sciences, Columbia University, 1996.
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholar in Health Policy Research University California, Berkeley, 1996—1998. Assistant professor, department sociology and African and African-American studies, resident fellow, Institution for Social and Policy Studies Yale University, New Haven, 1998—1999. Research associate National Bureau Economic Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Director, Center for Advanced Social Science Research, professor sociology public policy New York University, New York. Research consultant National Center for Children in Poverty, Columbia University, Nuclear, 1994—1997. Visiting associate professor, department sociology Princeton University, New Jersey, 2001, Yale University, New Haven, 2001, member, Statlab committee, member, committee on the economic status of the facutly, member, faculty and advisory committee, member, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholars in Health Policy program.
Member National Institutes of Health Review Panel: Intergenerational Family Resources, 03. Adjunct professor, community medicine Mount Sinai School Medicine, New York City. Member National Institutes of Health review panel, Mind-Body Interactions and Health: Exploratory and Development Research, 2004.
Member Society Fellows New York University, alternate faculty senator, chair, graduate admissions committee, 2001—2002, member, computer committee, faculty recruitment committee, & colloquium committee, chair, research committee, 2000—2002, urban studies master teacher: Draper graduate program, member, board advisory, office of institutional engagement. Member steering committee, joint degrees program in diversity studies University Capetown and New York University. Lecturer and presenter in field, since 1994.
( Being Black, Living in the Red demonstrates that many d...)
(Interesting sociological commentary on race and wealth us...)
Member Growing Wealth Working Group Corporation for Enterprise Development, since 2000. Member, roster of experts Institute for Public Accuracy, since 2001. Member steering committee Urban Institute Audrey Cohen College, since 2001.
Member, committee on poverty and health Social Science Research Council, 2001. Judge New York City Quality of Life Competition, since 2001. Member Advancement Project, since 2002.
Judge New York City Junior Science and Humanities Symposium: New York Academy Sciences, 2002, Bruno Brand Book award, Simon Wisenthal Center, Museum of Tolerance, 2002. Member of International Sociological Association (member committee on social stratification committee on sociology of children), American Sociological Association (member Oliver Cox awards committee, race and ethnic minorities section 1998-1999, member nominating committee, sociology of children section 1998-1999, session organizer, sociology of children section 2001, member nominating committee, community and urban sociology section 2002-2003, chair, nominating committee, community and urban sociology section 2003, section council member, sociology of children section 2003-2005, Community and Urban Sociology Section Student Paper award 1994, 1995, 1997), Council Foreign Relations (elected term member 2002).