The Moynihan Report Revisited: Lessons and Reflections after Four Decades
Special Editor: Douglas S. Massey and Robert J. Sampson
Volume 621, January, 2009
Introduction Moynihan Redux: Legacies and Lessons Douglas S. Massey and Robert J. Sampson
Foreword Pat Moynihan Thinks about Families
James Q. Wilson
Foreword The Moynihan Report and Research on the Black Community
William Julius Wilson
The Labor Market and Young Black Men: Updating Moynihan’s Perspective
Harry J. Holzer
Bayesian Bigot? Statistical Discrimination, Stereotypes, and Employer Decision Making
Devah Pager and Diana Karafin
If Moynihan Had Only Known: Race, Class, and Family Change in the Late Twentieth Century
Frank F. Furstenberg
Fragile Families and the Reproduction of Poverty
Sara McLanahan
Romantic Unions in an Era of Uncertainty: A Post-Moynihan Perspective on African American Women and Marriage
Linda M. Burton and M. Belinda Tucker
Claiming Fatherhood: Race and the Dynamics of Paternal Involvement among Unmarried Men
Kathryn Edin, Laura Tach, and Ronald Mincy
Welfare Reform in the mid-2000s: How African-American and Hispanic Families in Three Cities Are Faring
Andrew Cherlin, Bianca Frogner, David Ribar, and Robert Moffitt
The New U.S. Immigrants: How Do They Affect Our Understanding the African American Experience?
Frank D. Bean, Cynthia Feliciano, Jennifer Lee, and Jennifer Van Hook
The Black Family and Mass Incarceration
Bruce Western and Christopher Wildeman
Race in the American Mind: From the Moynihan Report to the Obama Candidacy
Lawrence D. Bobo and Camille Z. Charles
Racial Stratification and the Durable Tangle of Neighborhood Inequality
Robert J. Sampson
Moynihan Was Right: Now What?
Ron Haskins
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