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Kazeem, Aramide; Jensen, Leif; Stokes, C. Shannon – Comparative Education Review, 2010
This article presents a research which examines the impact of religion, gender, and parental socioeconomic status on school attendance in Nigeria. Researchers found that both gender and parental socioeconomic status have significant impacts on school attendance. Although gender is an important determinant of school attendance, indicators of…
Descriptors: Muslims, Socioeconomic Status, Religion, Attendance
Weber, Bruce; Jensen, Leif; Miller, Kathleen; Mosley, Jane; Fisher, Monica – Institute for Research on Poverty, 2005
Poverty rates are highest in the most urban and most rural areas of the United States, and are higher in nonmetropolitan than metropolitan areas. Yet, perhaps because only one-fifth of the nation's 35 million poor people live in nonmetropolitan areas, rural poverty has received less attention than urban poverty from both policymakers and…
Descriptors: Poverty, Rural Areas, Incidence, Literature Reviews
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Jensen, Leif; Eggebeen, David J. – Rural Sociology, 1994
Census Bureau data, 1970-90, indicate that families of nonmetropolitan poor children relied more heavily on parental earnings and less on public assistance than their metropolitan counterparts, but reliance on public assistance rose sharply during the period, especially for nonmetro children. Welfare's ability to ameliorate poverty was modest and…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Children, Family Income, Fatherless Family
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Fengler, Alfred P.; Jensen, Leif – Journal of Gerontology, 1981
Studied life satisfaction of urban and nonurban elderly Vermonters (N=1405). Results confirm that there are few significant objective differences, however, the nonurban felt subjectively that they were better off. Perceived evaluations of status were found to be better predictors of life satisfaction than objective measures. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Comparative Analysis, Older Adults, Place of Residence
Jensen, Leif – 1988
Some observers believe that welfare programs have an urban bias; however, the rate of poverty is higher in rural than in urban areas. This study establishes metro and nonmetro differences in the use of welfare and the degree to which it reduces poverty. Data from the U. S. Census Bureau's March 1987 Current Population Survey are analyzed using…
Descriptors: Low Income Groups, Metropolitan Areas, Poverty, Poverty Areas
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McLaughlin, Diane K.; Jensen, Leif – Rural Sociology, 1995
Data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (1988 wave) reveal that nonpoor individuals aged 55 and older living in nonmetropolitan areas were much more likely to become poor than their metropolitan counterparts. This difference persisted when controlling for race, education, marital status, age, change in work effort, becoming widowed, and types…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Income, Life Events, Middle Aged Adults
Lichter, Daniel T.; Jensen, Leif – Rural America, 2001
Rural poverty among female-headed families with children has declined since 1996 welfare reforms. Moreover, the income of female-headed families has increased, while income from earnings has more than offset declines in public assistance income. Rural single mothers nevertheless continue to experience higher poverty rates than their urban…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Employed Women, Employment, Fatherless Family
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Jensen, Leif; Tienda, Marta – Rural Sociology, 1989
Between 1959 and 1979, the economic status of nonmetropolitan Black, Mexican-American, and Native American families improved substantially, but nonmetropolitan Black and Mexican-American family incomes deteriorated significantly from 1979 to 1986. Labor force commitment reduced family poverty more effectively than public assistance for all groups.…
Descriptors: American Indians, Blacks, Census Figures, Economic Factors
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Jensen, Leif; Findeis, Jill L.; Hsu, Wan-Ling; Schachter, Jason P. – Rural Sociology, 1999
Underemployment is another indicator of nonmetropolitan labor's disadvantaged circumstances. Yearly employment transitions during 1968 and 1993, show that compared to urban counterparts, adequately employed nonmetro workers were more likely to become underemployed; the nonmetro underemployed were less likely to become adequately employed; and…
Descriptors: Blacks, Disadvantaged, Educational Attainment, Employment Patterns
Lichter, Daniel T.; Jensen, Leif – 2000
This paper documents changing rates of poverty, sources of income, and employment among rural female-headed families with children, focusing on the effects of welfare reform. Data from the Current Population Survey show that from 1989 through 1999, especially since passage of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Fatherless Family, Feminization of Poverty
Brown, J. Lynne; Jensen, Leif; Mastrofski, Jennifer – 1997
Interviews with 107 rural divorced, single mothers in 6 Pennsylvania counties examined their use of and attitudes toward community assistance programs, workfare, and educational programs. Many respondents had used welfare and nutrition programs and felt the programs were needed. However, they felt that child feeding programs were more accessible…
Descriptors: Children, Community Services, Educational Needs, Family Programs