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      Intimate Partner Violence in the Great Recession

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      Demography
      Springer Nature

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="P4">In the United States, the Great Recession was marked by severe negative shocks to labor market conditions. In this study, we combine longitudinal data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study with U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data on local area unemployment rates to examine the relationship between adverse labor market conditions and mothers' experiences of abusive behavior between 2001 and 2010. Unemployment and economic hardship at the household level were positively related to abusive behavior. Further, rapid increases in the unemployment rate increased men's controlling behavior toward romantic partners even after we adjust for unemployment and economic distress at the household level. We interpret these findings as demonstrating that the uncertainty and anticipatory anxiety that go along with sudden macroeconomic downturns have negative effects on relationship quality, above and beyond the effects of job loss and material hardship. </p>

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          Fragile Families: sample and design

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            How emotion shapes behavior: feedback, anticipation, and reflection, rather than direct causation.

            Fear causes fleeing and thereby saves lives: this exemplifies a popular and common sense but increasingly untenable view that the direct causation of behavior is the primary function of emotion. Instead, the authors develop a theory of emotion as a feedback system whose influence on behavior is typically indirect. By providing feedback and stimulating retrospective appraisal of actions, conscious emotional states can promote learning and alter guidelines for future behavior. Behavior may also be chosen to pursue (or avoid) anticipated emotional outcomes. Rapid, automatic affective responses, in contrast to the full-blown conscious emotions, may inform cognition and behavioral choice and thereby help guide current behavior. The automatic affective responses may also remind the person of past emotional outcomes and provide useful guides as to what emotional outcomes may be anticipated in the present. To justify replacing the direct causation model with the feedback model, the authors review a large body of empirical findings.
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              Instrumental Variables and the Search for Identification: From Supply and Demand to Natural Experiments

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Demography
                Demography
                Springer Nature
                0070-3370
                1533-7790
                April 2016
                March 22 2016
                : 53
                : 2
                : 471-505
                Article
                10.1007/s13524-016-0462-1
                4860387
                27003136
                bd5c3277-ff56-4d92-8b8f-380902377da6
                © 2016

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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