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Yu, Ge; Renton, Adrian; Wall, Martin; Estacio, Emee; Cawley, Justine; Datta, Pratibha – Social Indicators Research, 2011
Achieving adequate levels of physical activity (PA) is important to maintain health and prevent chronic disease. The costs of inadequate physical activity to the NHS have been estimated at over a billion pounds annually. While socio-demographic characteristics such as age, sex and ethnicity have been reported to be associated with different levels…
Descriptors: Incidence, Health Needs, Ethnicity, Marital Status
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Washington, DC. – 1987
This report analyzes recent Census data on poverty and income for 1986. While the poverty rate declined slightly in 1986, it remained at an unusually high level for the fourth year of an economic recovery, and minority poverty rates remain far higher than those of the general population. The poor grew poorer in 1986, and the gap between rich and…
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Change, Family Income, Hispanic Americans

Evanson, Elizabeth; Uhr, E. – Focus, 1986
In 1974, children under 18 displaced the elderly as the poorest age group, and in 1985 households with children accounted for over two-thirds of all poor people in the United States. To better understand the factors underlying the deteriorating well-being of families with children, census data on family income from 1967 to 1984 was studied. Three…
Descriptors: Blacks, Children, Economic Status, Economically Disadvantaged
Gottschalk, Peter; Danziger, Sheldon – 1999
This longitudinal study investigated two issues regarding child poverty dynamics: whether long-run transitions out of poverty have changed and whether the events associated with exits from poverty have changed over time. The study contrasted mobility patterns of young children over the 1970s with patterns over the 1980s, examining which poor…
Descriptors: Blacks, Children, Family Income, Family Structure
Ghelfi, Linda M. – 1986
This report analyzes the sources of income and the income problems of black families in the nonmetropolitan South based on 1980 data. It also describes some characteristics of family householders and adult family members related to income-earning capacity, such as age, education, work disability, labor force status, occupation, and weeks worked.…
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Status, Economically Disadvantaged, Family Income
Bureau of the Census (DOC), Suitland, MD. Population Div. – 1982
This report presents 20 tables of data on money income and poverty status of individuals and families in the United States in 1981, as derived from the 1982 Current Population Survey of the Bureau of the Census. The income and poverty data are shown in relation to different variables, including race/ethnicity, type of residence, geographical…
Descriptors: Age, Blacks, Economic Status, Family Characteristics

Erickson, Rodney A.; Miller, Theodore K. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1978
In this study, information on race, poverty, and socioeconomic variables was analyzed to examine underlying relationships. A strong association of Blacks with poverty in suburban areas was found. The research supports the position that suburbanization of Blacks has not changed the intrametropolitan distribution of minority economic welfare.…
Descriptors: Blacks, Case Studies, Factor Analysis, Family Characteristics

Bradley, Robert H.; Corwyn, Robert F.; McAdoo, Harriette Pipes; Coll, Cynthia Garcia – Child Development, 2001
Examined National Longitudinal Survey of Youth data on four versions of HOME-Short Form for four major ethnic groups. Found differences for majority of items between poor and non-poor families. Magnitude of effect for poverty was greater than for ethnicity. For every item at every age, effects of poverty were proportional across European American,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Asian Americans, Blacks, Children
Hoppe, Robert A.; And Others – 1986
To study the social and economic conditions where black farmers live, 342 southern counties, each having at least 25 black farmers, were identified. The counties were divided into five categories, four of which reflected the most common commodity type of black-operated farm and one which did not exhibit any common black-operated farm type. Most…
Descriptors: Black Businesses, Blacks, Demography, Economic Climate
Liston, Margaret I., Ed. – 1974
The Technical Committee for NC-90, sponsored by the Agricultural and Home Economics Experiment Stations of 13 states (Alaska, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin) and in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, has compiled a basebook which identifies…
Descriptors: Blacks, Demography, Disadvantaged Environment, Family Characteristics

Lichter, Daniel T.; Eggebeen, David J. – Social Forces, 1993
Analysis of census data indicates that the proportions of children in both the wealthiest and poorest families increased during the 1980s, associated with increasing female-headed families and changing patterns of maternal employment. Moreover, increasing racial differences in family structure exacerbated income inequality between African-American…
Descriptors: Blacks, Children, Demography, Economic Status
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1991
During the 1980s, the population of black women aged 16 years and older in the United States increased by 17.2%, and labor force participation for black women increased by 29%. In 1987, black women accounted for 50% of total black employment. The unemployment rate for black teenagers in 1990 was 30% (versus 10.8% for all black women). Labor force…
Descriptors: Black Employment, Blacks, Educational Attainment, Employment Opportunities
Primus, Wendell E. – 2002
This supplementary analysis to "Declining Share of Children Lived with Single Mothers in the Late 1990s" employs an alternative methodology to provide a clearer picture of changes in living arrangements within different income groups. The original study concluded that children were significantly less likely to live with single mothers in…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Blacks, Child Welfare, Early Parenthood
Malson, Michelene R.; Woody, Bette – 1985
One aspect of the general rise in the number of single parent households is the high proportion of them that are headed by black women. Black families headed by women tend to be larger and are more likely to be impoverished. Contrary to popular belief, many black single mothers considered poor are employed women, not recipients of welfare. An…
Descriptors: Blacks, Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Family Income
Kuvlesky, William P.; Wright, David E. – 1965
Poverty, which is defined as a family income of less than $3,000 annually, is more serious than just being deprived of simple luxuries. To be poor is to suffer physically and to have high mortality rates. It also means ecological and social segregation from society. In 1960 Texas had a larger proportion of families with incomes under $3,000…
Descriptors: Blacks, Census Figures, Ecological Factors, Family Income