普林斯顿大学社会学系导师教师师资介绍简介-Tod G. Hamilton

本站小编 Free考研考试/2022-09-24

Position
Professor of Sociology

Office Phone
609-258-5938

Email
todh@princeton.edu

Office
128 Wallace Hall

Website
http://scholar.princeton.edu/todh/home


Bio/Description
CV
Tod G. Hamilton is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and a Faculty Associate of the Office of Population Research. His research interests are in the field of demography, with an emphasis on immigration and health. His current research evaluates the relative importance of culture and selective migration in explaining differential patterns of stratification between U.S.-born and foreign-born individuals in the United States. Hamilton also explores the degree of health selection among contemporary immigrants to the United States as well as the role that social, economic, and health conditions in immigrants’ countries of origin play in explaining variation in their post-migration health in the United States.
How diverse is the black population in the United States?
Between 1960 and 2005, the number of black immigrants in the United States increased from approximately 125,000 to approximately 2,815,000. Relative to the size of the black immigrant population in the United States, this group has also contributed disproportionately to the growth of the entire black population in recent decades. If these trends continue, black immigrants and their descendants will play a significant role in determining perceptions of social and economic well-being of the country’s black population in future decades.
My current work investigates how these demographic changes impact racial disparities in health and labor market outcomes among individuals who reside in the United States. I’m currently involved in two strands of research. The first evaluates the factors that generate labor market differences between black immigrants and black natives. The second strand of research explores the degree of health selection among black immigrants as well as the role that conditions in black immigrants’ countries of origin play in explaining variation in their post-migration health in the United States.

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