VITA 1/02
NAME: S. Philip Morgan
RESIDENCE: 522 Morgan Creek Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27514
919-967-4077
OFFICE: Sociology Department, 268 Soc-Psych Bldg., Box 90088
Duke
University, Durham, NC 27708-0088
919-660-5747;
FAX: 919-660-5623; E-mail: pmorgan@soc.duke.edu
EDUCATION:
1976-80 University
of Arizona (Tucson, Arizona)
Received
Ph.D. degree in Sociology (December, 1980)
Received
Master of Arts Degree in Sociology (May, 1978)
1971-76 University
of North Carolina (Chapel Hill)
Received
Bachelor of Arts with Honors degree in
Sociology
(May, 1976)
FIELDS: Social Demography,
Sociology of the Family, Research Methods
POSITIONS HELD:
July 1998- Professor of Sociology, Duke
University, Durham, NC
present
Jan. 1997- Visiting
Fellow, Department of Demography, Australian National
March 1997 University,
Canberra, Australia
July 1992- Professor
of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA
June 1998 Chair, Dept. of Sociology, July 1993-96;
Chair, Graduate Group in Demography, July
Jan. 1992- Visiting Professor of Sociology,
Princeton University,
June 1992 Princeton, NJ
Sept. 1990- Visiting
Fellow, Department of Demography, Australian National
May 1991 University,
Canberra, Australia
July 1988- Associate
Professor of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania,
June 1992 Philadelphia,
PA. Undergraduate Chair of Sociology,
July 1990-June 1991.
Aug. 1984- Assistant
Professor of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania,
July 1988 Philadelphia, PA
Sept. 1983- Assistant
Professor of Sociology, University of Georgia,
Aug. 1984 Athens,
GA
Oct. 1982- Research
Associate, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
Sept. 1983
Sept. 1980- Post Doctoral Fellow, Carolina Population
Center, University of
Sept. 1982 North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
RESEARCH SUPPORT:
July 2001- Principal
Investigator. “Late 20th Century U.S. Fertility Trends and
Differentials.”National
June 2005 Institute of
Child Health and Human Development, Direct Costs $700,000.
July 2001- Co-Investigator.
“Family policies, child cost and low fertility.” National
June 2003 Institute of
Child Health and Human Development, Tom Diprete (P.I.) Direct Costs
$100,000.
July 1997- Principal Investigator. “Graduate
Training in Demography.” National Institute of Child
June 2002 Health and Human
Development, Direct Costs 1,036,544. After
award PI transferred to Douglas
Massey in anticipation of my move to Duke
University 7/1/98.
March 1996- Co-Principal Investigator, "Women’s
Status and Fertility." National Institute of Child Health
March 2000 and Human Development, H.L. Smith,
Project Director. Direct Costs $379,801, R01
HD33791.
Sep. 1993- Principal
Investigator, "Evaluating assessments of subjective
Aug. 1997 phenomena."
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Direct Costs $255,127
R01 HD31055.
July 1992- Principal
Investigator, "Recent Changes in U.S. Fertility", National Institute of
June 1996 Child
Health and Human Development, Direct Costs $225,122, R01 HD29582.
Dec. 1995- Principal Investigator (with Bhanu
Niraula), "Socio-Economic Change, Women's Status
Nov. 1996 and Fertility in Nepal: Phase
II." Supported by the Mellon
Foundation, $20,000.
Dec. 1992- Principal Investigator (with Bhanu
Niraula), "Socio-Economic Change,
Nov. 1993 Women's Status and Fertility in
Nepal." Supported by the Mellon
Foundation, $22,650.
July 1992 Principal Investigator (with A.
Dharmalingam), "Fertility and Marriage Change in Two
June 1993 South Indian Villages." Supported by the Mellon Foundation, $40,000.
July 1989- Principal Investigator, "U.S.
Racial Differences in Family Structure, 1910
June 1992 "National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development, Direct Costs $211,027, 1 R01HD25856.
May 1988 Principal
Investigator, "Sex of Children, Divorce, and Paternal Participation,"
April 1990 "National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development, Direct Costs $89,446, R01HD24255.
Aug. 1986- Co-Principal Investigator,
"Fertility and Child Mortality in the United States 1910,"
July 1988 "National Institute of child
Health and Human Development, S.H. Preston, Project Director
$286,688,
R01 HD22099.
Aug. 1985- Research Associate, "Family
Formation Among the Children of Adolescent Parents,"
Dec. 1988 Ford Foundation
and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, F.F. Furstenberg, Principal Investigator,
$390,000.
Aug. 1985- Co-Principal Investigator, "Effects
of Divorce on Children," National Science Foundation,
Sept. 1986 P. Allison, F.F. Furstenberg, Jr. and
S.P. Morgan. Principal Investigators,
$37,092, NSF
SES84-21070
Sept. 1981- Research Associate,
"Social-Demographic Aspects of Delayed Childbearing,"
Aug. 1984 National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development, R.R. Rindfuss, Principal
Investigator, $288,533, N01-HD12823
BOOKS PUBLISHED OR IN PRESS:
Rindfuss, Ronald R., S. Philip Morgan, and C. Gray Swicegood, First
Births in America: Changes in the Timing of Parenthood. University of
California Press, 1988.
Furstenberg, Frank F., J. Brooks Gunn, and S. Philip Morgan, Adolescent
Mothers in Later Life, Cambridge University Press, 1987.
RESEARCH ARTICLES PUBLISHED OR IN PRESS:
(+ = refereed journals;
order of authorship implies primary vs. secondary contributions except where
indicated, a = authors share primary authorship, b = Morgan and Furstenberg
share first authorship)
Morgan, S. Philip. Forthcoming.
“Fertility.” In Handbook of Population, Poston,
Dudley L. Jr. and Michael Micklin
(eds). Boston:Klewer Academic Publishers
Morgan, S. Philip and Ronald R. Rindfuss. Forthcoming. “Family size preferences.” Encyclopedia of Population. Farmington Hills, MI:Macmillan.
Morgan, S. Philip. Forthcoming.
“The baby boom.” Encyclopedia of
Population, Farmington Hills, MI:Macmillan.
Morgan, S. Philip. Forthcoming.
“Should fertility intentions inform fertility forecasts?” Proceedings of U.S.
Census Bureau Conference: The Direction of Fertility in the United States.
Washington D.C: U.S. Census Bureau.
+Morgan, S. Philip, A. Dharmalingam, Janet Sceats and Ian Pool. 2001.
“The link of early childbearing to marriage and to subsequent fertility in New
Zealand.” New Zealand Population Review 27:46-73.
Morgan, S. Philip and Scott M. Lynch. 2001. “Demography’s Success and
Its Future: The role of Data and Methods.” In Population Health and Aging: Strengthening the Dialogue Between
Epidemiology
and Demography, Annals of the New York
Academy of Sciences, Volume 954.
+Morgan, S. Philip and Rosalind Berkowitz King. 2001. “Why Have Children in the 21st
Century? Biological Predisposition, Social Coercion, Rational Choice”. European Journal of Population: 17:3-20.
Morgan, S. Philip. 2000. “Current features and future trends in U.S.
fertility.”, Population Bulletin of
the United Nations. Below Replacement Fertility: Special Issue
Nos. 40/41. 1999: 334-348.
Niraula, Bhanu B. and S. Philip Morgan.2000. “Gender inequality in two
Nepali settings.” Pp. 42-72 in Garcia,
Brigida (ed.) Women, Poverty and Demographic Change. Oxford:Oxford U. Press.
+Morgan, S. Philip, N. Botev, R. Chen and J. Huang. 1999. "White and nonwhite trends in first
birth timing: Comparisons using Vital Registration and Current Population
Surveys." Population Research and Policy Review:18:339-356.
+Morgan, S. Philip and Ronald R. Rindfuss. 1999. “Re-examining the link
of early childbearing to marriage and to subsequent fertility.” Demography:
36:59-75.
Swicegood, Gray and S.
Philip Morgan. 1999. "Racial and
ethnic fertility differentials in the United
States." In Denton,
Nancy A. and Stewart E. Tolnay, American
Diversity: A Demographic Challenge for the Twenty-First Century.
Albany:SUNY Press. (Paper presented at the 13th Albany Conference: American
Diversity: A Demographic Challenge for the Twenty-First Century." State University of New York at Albany,
April 15-16.)
Neidell, Shara, Bhanu Niraula, S. Philip Morgan and Sharon Stash. 1998.
“Moslem and non-Moslem fertility differences in the Eastern Terai in
Nepal.” Contributions to Nepalese
Studies 25 Special Issue 109-129.
+Smith, Herbert L., Constance
T. Gager and S. Philip Morgan. 1998. “Identifying underlying dimensions in
spouses’ evaluations of fairness in the division of household labor.” Social
Science Research 27:305-327.
+McDaniel, Antonio, S.
Philip Morgan. 1996. "Racial
differences in mother-child coresidence in the
past.” Journal of Marriage and the Family
58:1011-1017. a
+ Rindfuss, Ronald R., S.
Philip Morgan and Kate Offutt. 1996. “Education and the changing age pattern of
American fertility: 1963-89.” Demography 33:277-290..
+Dharmalingam, A. and S. Philip Morgan. 1996. “Women’s work, autonomy
and birth control: Evidence from two south Indian villages.” Population Studies 50:187-201..
+Pagnini, Deanna and S. Philip Morgan. 1996. "Racial Differences in marriage and childbearing: oral
history evidence from the South in the early twentieth century." American
Journal of Sociology 101:1694-1718.
+Niraula, Bhanu and S. Philip Morgan. 1996a. “Marriage formation,
post-marital contact with natal kin and autonomy of women: Evidence from two
Nepali settings.” Population Studies 50:35-50.
+Niraula, Bhanu B. and S. Philip Morgan. 1996b. "Son and daughter
preferences in Benighat, Nepal: Implications for fertility
transition." Social Biology 42:256-273.a
+Smith, Herbert L., S. Philip Morgan, and Tanya Koropeckyj-Cox. 1996.
“A decomposition of trends in the nonmarital fertility ratios of blacks and
whites in the United States, 1960-92.” Demography 33:141-51.
+Sloane, Douglas and S. Philip
Morgan. 1996. “An introduction to categorical data analysis.” Annual
Review of Sociology 22:351-375..
+Morgan, S. Philip. 1996. "Characteristic features of modern
American fertility." Population and Development Review 22
(Supplement):19-63. Prepared for the
Workshop on Expanding Frameworks for Fertility Research in Industrialized
countries sponsored by the Committee on Population of the National Academy of
Sciences, Woods Hole, Mass., September 22-23.
+Morgan, S. Philip and Bhanu B. Niraula. 1995. "Gender inequality and fertility in two
Nepal villages.” Population and Development Review 21:541-561..
+London, Andrew S. and S. Philip Morgan. 1994. "Racial differences in first names in
1910." Journal of Family
History, 19:261-84.
+Smith, Herbert L. and S. Philip Morgan. 1994. "Children's
closeness to father as reported by mothers, sons and daughters: Evaluating
subjective assessments with the Rasch Model." Journal of Family Issues 15:3-29.
Miller, Andrew T., S. Philip Morgan and Antonio McDaniel. 1994.
"Under the same roof: Family and household structure." Pp. 125-173. In Susan Watkins (ed) After Ellis Island: A 1910 Census
Monograph. New York: Russell Sage
Foundation.
Morgan, S. Philip, Susan C. Watkins and Douglas Ewbank. 1994.
"Generating Americans: The fertility of the foreign-born in the U.S.,
1905-10." Pp. 83-124. In Susan Watkins (ed) After Ellis Island:
A 1910 Census Monograph. New York:
Russell Sage Foundation.
+Morgan, S. Philip, Antonio McDaniel, Andrew Miller and Samuel Preston.
1993. "Racial differences in household and family structure at the turn of
the century." American Journal of Sociology 98:798-
828.
+Bracher, Michael, Gigi Santow, S. Philip Morgan and James Trussell.
1993. "Marriage dissolution in Australia:models and
explanations." Population
Studies 47:403-425.
+Morgan, S. Philip and Renbao Chen. 1992. "Predicting
childlessness for recent cohorts of American women." International
Journal of Forecasting 8:477-493.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1992. "Third world urbanization, migration and
family adaptation." Pp 235-254 in
Kasarda, J. ed. Third World Cities:
Problems, Policies, and Prospects.
Newbury Park, CA: Russell Sage.
+Preston, Samuel H., Suet Lim and S. Philip Morgan. 1992. "African-American Marriage in 1910: Beneath
the Surface of Census Data." Demography
29:1-15.
+Morgan, S. Philip. 1991. "Late nineteenth and early twentieth
century childlessness in the United States." American Journal of Sociology 97:779-807.
+Harris, Kathleen M. and S. Philip Morgan. 1991. "Fathers, sons
and daughters: differential paternal involvement in parenting." Journal
of Marriage and the Family 1991:531-544.a
+Chen, Renbao and S. Philip Morgan. 1991. "Recent trends in the
timing of first births in the United States: an update and examination of
earlier projections." Demography 28:513-533.a
+Ekouevi, Koffi and S. Philip Morgan. 1991. "Note on the
reliability and validity of mothers' retrospective reports of their children's
birth weights." Social Biology
38:140-145.a
+Pagnini, Deanna L. and S. Philip Morgan. 1990. "Intermarriage and
social distance among U.S. immigrants at the turn of the century." American Journal of Sociology. 96:405-432.a
Morgan, S. Philip. 1989. "Immigrazione e
diversita etnico-razziale: il caso degli Stati Uniti (Immigration and
racial/ethnic diversity: The United States case)" Pp.39-60 in Abitare
Il Pianeta: Futuro Demografico,
Migration e Tensioni Etniche. Torino:Fondazione Agnelli.
+Morgan, S. Philip, Diane N. Lye, and Gretchen A. Condran, 1988.
"Sons, daughters and the risk of marital disruption." American
Journal of Sociology, 94:110-129.
+Apichat Chamratrithirong, S. Philip Morgan, and Ronald R. Rindfuss.
1988. "Living arrangements and
family formation." Social Forces 66:926-950.a
+Furstenberg, Frank F., S. Philip Morgan, Kristin
Moore, and James Peterson. 1987. "Exploring race differences in the timing
of adolescent intercourse." American Sociological Review
52:695-701.b
+Morgan, S. Philip and Jay D. Teachman. 1988. "Logistic
regression: Description, examples, and comparisons." Journal of
Marriage and the Family. 50:929-36.
+Morgan, S. Philip and Linda J. Waite. 1987. "Parenthood and the attitudes of young adults." American Sociological Review.
52:541-47.a
+Furstenberg, Frank F., Jr, S. Philip Morgan and Paul Allison.
1987. "Paternal participation and
children's well being after divorce:"
American Sociological Review.
52:695-701.
Furstenberg, Frank F., Jr, J.
Brooks Gunn and S. Philip Morgan. 1987.
"Adolescent mothers and their children in later life." Family Planning Perspectives. 19:142-151.
+Abdelrahman, A.I. and S. Philip Morgan. 1986. "Socioeconomic
and institutional determinants of family formation: Khartoum, Sudan,
1945-75." Journal of Marriage and the Family. 49:401-412.a
+Mammo, Abate and S. Philip Morgan. 1986. "Childlessness in rural
Ethiopia." Population and Development Review. 12:533-45.a
+Morgan, S. Philip and Ronald R. Rindfuss. 1985. "Marital
disruption: Structural and temporal dimensions." American Journal of Sociology. 90:1055-1077.
+Morgan, S. Philip, 1985.
"Individual and couple intentions for more children: A research
note." Demography. 22:125-132.
+Rindfuss, Ronald R., S. Philip Morgan, and Gray Swicegood. 1984.
"The transition to motherhood: The
intersection of structural and temporal dimensions." American
Sociological Review. 49:359-372.
+Morgan, S. Philip, Ronald R. Rindfuss and, Allan
Parnell. 1984. "Modern fertility
patterns: The transition to parenthood
in Japan and the United States." Population and Development Review.
10:19-40.
+Swicegood, C. Gray, S. Philip Morgan, and Ronald R. Rindfuss. 1984.
"Measurement and replication: Evaluating
the consistency of eight U.S. fertility surveys." Demography.
21:19-33.
+Morgan, S. Philip and Ronald R. Rindfuss. 1984. "Household
structure and the tempo of family formation in comparative perspective." Population
Studies. 38:129-39.
+Rindfuss, Ronald R. and S. Philip Morgan. 1983. "Marriage,
sex, and the first birth interval: The
quiet revolution in Asia." Population and Development Review.
9:259-278.
+Morgan, S. Philip and Kiyoshi Hirosima. 1983. "The
persistence of extended family residence in Japan: Anachronism or alternative strategy?" American Sociological Review.
48:269-281.
+Morgan, S. Philip. 1983. "A research note on religion and
morality: Are religious people nice people?" Social Forces. 61:683-692.
+Fligstein, Neil, Alex Hicks and S. Philip Morgan. 1983.
"Toward a theory of income determination." Sociology of Work
and Occupations. 10:289-306.
+Morgan, S. Philip. 1982. "Parity-specific fertility intentions
and uncertainty: The United States,
1970 to 1976." Demography. 19:315-334.
+Morgan, S. Philip. 1981.
"Intention and uncertainty at later stages of childbearing: The United
States, 1965-70." Demography. 18:267-286.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1981. "Prayerfulness in America." Chicago
Studies. 20:237-252.
PUBLISHED EXCHANGES:
Morgan, S. Philip. 2000. “Comment on: Demographic change and public
assistance expenditures” in Auerbach, Allan J. and Ronald D. Lee (eds). Demographic Change and Public Assistance
Expenditures. Cambridge U. Press.
Apichat Chamratrithirong, S. Philip Morgan and Ronald R. Rindfuss.
1992. "Why does it matter: A reply to
Knodel and Chayovan." Social Forces
71:999-1000.
Teachman Jay and S. Philip Morgan. 1990. "A brief reply to
Demaris." Journal of Marriage and the Family. 52:277.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1986.
"On identifying determinants of divorce in a divorcing population:
Comments on Rankin and Maneker." Journal of Marriage and the Family.
48:673-75.
Morgan, S. Philip and Tim F. Liao.
1985. "A cautionary note on
the analysis of life cycle events:
Comments on Smith and Meitz." Journal of Marriage and Family.
47:233-236.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1984. "Reply
to King and Hunt." Social Forces. 62:1089-1090.
PUBLISHED REVIEWS:
“Out-of-Wedlock Births: The United States in Comparative Perspective,
by Mark Abrahamson.” Contemporary
Sociology forthcoming.
“Without Issue: New
Zealanders who chose not to have children by Jan Cameron.” New
Zealand
Population Review (1998(24):135-138).
"Dating, mating and marriage by Martin King Whyte.” American
Journal of Sociology.
(1991(97):879-880).
"Reproduction and social organization in sub-Saharan Africa,
edited by Lesthaeghe, R.J." Social Forces (1991(69):261-262).
"Fertility change on the American frontier” by Bean, L.L., G.P.
Mineau, and D.L. Anderton." Social
Forces (1991(69):935-936).
"The changing lives of
American women by McLaughin, S.D., et al." American Journal of Sociology. (1989(95):799-801).
"Teenage pregnancy in industrialized countries by Jones, E.F., et
al." Journal of Marriage and the
Family. (1987(49):950-51).
PAPERS SUBMITTED FOR PUBLICATION:
Pollard, Michael S. and S. Philip Morgan. 2001. “Sex composition of
children and third birth progression”
Paper presented at the
annual meetings of the Population Association of America, March 28-31,
Washington, D.C.
Rindfuss, Ronald R., Karen
Benjamin and S. Philip Morgan. 2000. “The changing institutional context of
low fertility.” Paper
presented at the annual Meetings of the Population Association of America.,
March 23-25, 2000, Los Angeles, CA.
Morgan, S. Philip, Sharon Stash, Karen Mason and Herbert Smith. 1998.
“Do women’spower/autonomy differences between Moslems and
non-Moslems explain high demand for more children and low contraceptive use among Moslems? Evidence from India, Malaysia,
Thailand and the Philippines.”
Paper presented at the Annual
Meetings of the Population Association of America, April 2-4, Chicago.
Morgan, S. Philip and Allan Parnell. 1999. “Further examination of a
natural experiment: Access to abortion in North Carolina, 1980-93.” Paper
presented at the annual meetings of the Population Association of America,
March 25-28, New York, NY.
PAPERS PRESENTED AT PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS: [Not Published or Submitted for Publication]
Morgan, S. Philip and
Michael Pollard. 2002. “Do Parents of Girls Really Have a Higher Risk of
Divorce?” Paper to be
presented at the annual meetings of the Population Association of America, May
9-11, Atlanta.
Morgan, S. Philip and Yang Yang. 2002. “How Big Are Educational and
Racial Fertility Differentials in the U.S.?” Paper to be presented at the
annual meetings of the Population Association of America, May 9-11, Atlanta.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1999. “Post-transition fertility.” Invited paper presented in a Plenary
Session, Demographic Transitions, at the 1999 Annual Meeting of the American
Sociological Association, August 16-20, Chicago, IL.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1999. “Low fertility in developed countries.” Invited paper presented at conference on The
Future of Australia’s Population. October 9-12, Canberra, Australia.
Morgan, S. Philip, Herbert
L. Smith and Connie T. Gager. 1998. “His and her reports of marital happiness:
Assessing subjective reports
from husbands and wives in the NSFH.”
Paper presented at the Annual
Meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, August 21-25.
Smith, Herbert and S. Philip Morgan. 1994. "Individual and couple intentions for more children: an
application of the Rasch
Model." Paper presented at the
Annual Meetings of the Population Association of America, Miami, May 5-7.
Morgan, S. Philip, Smith, Herbert and Constance T. Gager. 1994. "Discrepant responses in spouses
reports of coital frequency."
Paper presented at the Annual
Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Los Angeles, August 5-9.
Morgan, S. Philip and Renbao Chen. 1992. "Thirtysomething
fertility: Recent fertility increase among baby boomers." Paper presented
at the Annual Meetings of the Population Association of America, April 30-May
2.
Morgan, S. Philip and Ellen A. Kramarow. 1992. "Stability and
change in female headship." Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the
Population Association of America, April 30-May 2.
Ewbank, Douglas, S. Philip Morgan and Susan C. Watkins. 1990.
"Immigrant fertility differences at
the turn of the century." Paper presented at the annual meetings of
the Population Association of America, May 3-5, Toronto, Canada.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1985.
"Nontraditional sex roles and the timing of parenthood." Paper presented at the annual meetings of
the American Sociological Association, Washington, D.C.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1982. "The intergenerational transmission of
religious behavior. The effects of
parents on their children's frequency of prayer." Paper presented at the
annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Toronto, Canada,
August, 1981.
Hout, Michael and S. Philip Morgan.
1981. "The fertility of black and white women during the baby boom:
Differences by parity, cohort, and age at marriage." Revision of a paper presented at the annual
meetings of the American Sociological Association, New York, August, 1980.
Morgan, S. Philip. 1979. "U.S. socioeconomic fertility
differentials: Stability or change." Paper presented at the annual
meetings of the American Sociological Association, New York, August, 1980.
COURSES TAUGHT:
Introductory Sociology (U.
Arizona)
The Family (Penn)
Undergraduate Research
Methods (Penn)
Human Fertility (Penn, Duke,
Princeton)
Demography of the Family
(Penn)
American Demographics (Duke)
Demographic Methods (Duke)
Population and Environment
(Duke)
PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS:
Population Association of
America
President-Elect 2002, President 2003
Board of Directors 1993-96, Finance Committee 1993-96,
Finance Committee Chair 1996
American Sociological
Association
Population Section, Chair 1998-99, Council Member 1989-92, OD Ducan
Book Award Com. 1996-1999, Chair of OD Duncan Book Award Committee 1998-99
Candidate for At-Large Council Seat 2001-2003
Family Section, member
International Union for the
Scientific Study of Population
EDITORIAL OR ADVISORY
ACTIVITIES
Editor: Demography 1998-01
Deputy Editor: Demography,
1984-87
Editorial Board: Social Forces, 1988-91
American Journal of Sociology, 1989-91
Occasional
Reviewer: American Sociological Review, American
Journal of Sociology, Demography, Journal of Marriage and the Family, Social Biology, Social
Forces, Population and Development Review, Sociological
Focus, Sociological Perspectives, Journal of Family Issues, Family
Planning, Perspectives, Journal
of Human Resources, National Academy of Sciences, Population
Research and Policy Review.
Chair of NIH SNEM IRG
Working Group, May- Nov. 2001
Member of the NIH Reviewers Reserve (NRR), July 1995-June 1999.
Member of Population
Research Sub-Committee, National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, 7/1/98 to 6/30/02. Chair: 9/00 to 6/02.
Member of the Science
Advisory Panel of the Alan Guttmacher Institute, 1998-01.
Member of the Panel on
Population Projections, Committee on Population, National Academy of Sciences.
Report : Beyond Six Billion (2000, National
Academy Press: Washington, D.C.)
Member of the NIH Social
Sciences and Population Study Section, Division of Research Grants: Feb. 1992-
June 1995.