In this paper, Annie Hines evaluates the effects of Colorado’s legislation on the college application, enrollment, persistence, and completion of Colorado undergraduates using a differences-in-differences methodology
This 2nd annual conference will discuss alumni research as well as provide opportunities to network and create collaborative relationships with current and future UC Davis Ph.D students.
In this paper, Cynthia van der Werf studies how the largest inflow of refugees in U.S. history affected U.S. children. Cynthia's paper also examines whether native children’s academic achievement was lower in ZIP Codes with higher shares of refugees using the National Education Longitudinal Study (NELS88) and U.S. Census data.
The NAWS was begun in 1989 to help DOL determine the supply of labor available to US crop agriculture so that, in conjunction with USDA estimates of the demand for crop workers, the proper number of free-agent RAW workers could have been legalized or admitted to prevent farm labor shortages. This workshop will review almost 30 years of NAWS data.
This conference presents research analyzing how those changes can affect individual, society and the economy in California, focusing on undocumented, on workers and on children and families.
UC Center Sacramento | 1130 K St LL22, Sacramento, CA 95814
Zhixian Lin's paper tries to estimate the long-term effects of a temporary human capital shock, induced by a forced migration policy in Chinese history.
Shenoy estimates the perceived cost of internal migration and associated labor supply elasticity in Thailand using the revealed-preference location decisions of workers.