Screen shot of bar graph in the report showing countries on the y axis ranked lowest to highest (respectively top to bottom) in terms of "Total good" percent those surveyed in that country reported, labeled as "% who rate the morality and ethics of people in their country as...". The bar graphic for each country shows the distribution of the responses in terms of percentage who reported "very good," "somewhat good," "somewhat bad," and "very bad." Then "Total bad" is shown for each country.
Pew Poll: US only place surveyed "...where more adults (ages 18 & older) describe the morality & ethics of others living in the country as bad (53%) than as good (47%)."
Not asked bf, thus unclear whether this pattern previously existed or is new.
sociology polisky
09.03.2026 13:42
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Hot of the presses research on high-cost alternative credit instruments and the welfare state by Rhodes, Berger, and @umichstonecid.bsky.social associate @davonnorris.bsky.social 👇
23.02.2026 14:08
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“With approximately half a million Americans diagnosed with dementia annually, this translates to nearly 90,000 cases that could potentially be prevented—a truly significant figure.” Kelly Bakulski, Associate Professor of Epidemiology, Michigan Public Health
New U-M research reveals older adults with high cumulative lead exposure face nearly triple the Alzheimer's risk. The study suggests reducing population lead levels could prevent thousands of dementia cases annually. myumi.ch/qZeXx
20.02.2026 14:30
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PNAS
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a peer reviewed journal of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) - an authoritative source of high-impact, original research that broadly spans...
Bots have made their way to Prolific experiments. Our lab has stopped online testing of adults entirely now for this reason - we want to know if what we study is real. Probably data collected 2-3 years ago are ok, but moving forward we just can't know. www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
19.02.2026 15:14
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We Are SRC
YouTube video by Survey Research Center, University of Michigan
Celebrating 80 years of social science in the public interest.
SRC’s founders believed social behavior could be understood in terms of attitudes and motivational behaviors, and links could be formed between an academic culture & the applied research of business and government. youtu.be/giSsP7o4PZg
29.01.2026 17:51
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How has your country's climate changed over the past century? Find out here:
17.02.2026 20:59
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Problem about the loneliness epidemic is, it's everywhere except in representative survey data. Let's look at where the claim comes from. 1/
17.02.2026 07:13
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"Billionaires like thinkers who see their exploitation of the weak as good and natural. Epstein funneled ~$20m a year to academic men who shared his ideology [and got] to hold forth in formal sessions at Harvard, condemning feeding and caring for the poor as if he were making a scholarly argument."
15.02.2026 15:49
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Cutting Indirect Costs for Universities Impacts More Than Research
Incoming APS President Pamela Davis-Kean describes the role indirect costs play in the U.S. research landscape and the economies of university communities.
Incoming APS President @umpamdk.bsky.social describes the role indirect costs play in the university research landscape, as well as the important role of universities in their local economies, and what's at stake if those indirect costs are cut. #AcademicSky
04.02.2026 15:59
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Abstract
Front-line workers mediate law on the books and law in action, translating higher-level laws into local policy. One important mediating institution is the police. Whereas most research analyzes how the law empowers police to label certain denizens “criminals” – both within and outside criminal legal contexts – this article demonstrates how policing also affects who is recognized as an innocent crime victim. Synthesizing existing scholarship, I theorize three paths through which police can affect legal recognition of crime victims: criminalization, minimization, and legal estrangement. I then test the extent to which these processes affect victims’ access to public benefits provided under victim compensation law. Drawing on never-before-analyzed administrative data from 18 U.S. states (N = 768,382), I find police account for more than half of all victim benefits denials. These denials are racialized and gendered: Police are significantly more likely to criminalize and be estranged from Black male victims and significantly more likely to minimize the injuries of Black female victims. Additional qualitative data suggest police systematically perceive Black men as not truly innocent and Black survivors of gender-based violence as not truly victims. These findings advance our understanding of the expansive role of police in society as well as the porous boundary between social provision and social control.
Figure 6. Predicted probability of “failure to cooperate” denials.
Proud to share my recently published article in Law & Society Review: "Whose victimization pays? Policing innocent
victimhood in victim compensation law". The article explores how policing affects the recognition of crime victims under victim compensation law. 🔗👇: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
04.02.2026 16:26
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Really amazing scholars (thank you @bradytwest.bsky.social and @randridge.bsky.social !) here to provide the fundamental science for free, for everyone @um-psc.bsky.social
26.01.2026 14:47
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Postdoctoral Fellowships – Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies
A Harvard University cross-school, interfaculty initiative administered by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
🚨Postdoc alert!
@harvardpopcenter.bsky.social is now accepting applications for 2026-2028 Bell Fellowship! Apply by March 3: popcenter.harvard.edu/postdoctoral...
@popassocamerica.bsky.social @iaphs.bsky.social @societyforepi.bsky.social @ashecon.bsky.social @asanews.bsky.social
20.01.2026 20:34
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#NewPublication reveals that metro areas with zoning laws that restrict housing density to low levels have wider race, ethnic, and income disparities in health: bit.ly/4bjoyze
By Kate W. Strully Tse-Chuan Yang Chunxu Fang &Han Liu
@UAlbany @UTSA @asamedsoc.bsky.social
06.01.2026 18:11
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In our December issue, read about the impacts of naturalization on mortality risks among immigrants to the US: bit.ly/40XQao6
By Thoa V. Khuu Jennifer Van Hook & Kendal L. Lowrey
@pop.psu.edu @asamedsoc.bsky.social
#InternationalMigrantsDay
22.12.2025 15:41
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In “Why Do Black Women Have a Higher Obesity Prevalence Than White Women?” Frisco et al. find that living in disadvantaged n'hoods & single-parent HHs as adolescents & having ↓ adult incomes explain much of the difference. @ssripennstate.bsky.social @pop.psu.edu read.dukeupress.edu/demography/a...
18.12.2025 20:43
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Miniature female and male figurines stand on wooden blocks with gender symbols and a "not equal" sign between them, with stacked coins in the background, symbolizing gender pay inequality.
New U-M research from ISR’s Sasha Killewald finds that women now earn about 85% of men’s hourly wages, up from 65% in the mid 1980s, and about 8% of that narrowing is linked to having fewer children.
Learn more: myumi.ch/kPWeG
16.12.2025 14:26
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The Roy Pierce Scholars Fund
The Roy Pierce Scholars Fund provides summer support for graduate students in the University of Michigan Political Science Department to work with a member of CPS faculty. The Pierce Fund honors Roy P...
🚨FELLOWSHIPS AVAILABLE! @umisrcps.bsky.social has seven #ISRNextGeneration awards open to UM graduate students and postdocs advancing research on comparative politics, political opinion & behavior, and more. Explore, share with students, and apply by Feb 9! cps.isr.umich.edu/fellowships/
11.12.2025 20:17
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Infographic titled "Sustainability Cultural Indicators Program (SCIP) 2024" measuring sustainability awareness and behaviors at U-M campuses. It includes circular indicators showing 2021–2024 data for waste prevention awareness and travel behavior (Ann Arbor), and commitment to behavior change (Ann Arbor, Dearborn, Flint), as well as 2012–2024 data for sustainability engagement and commitment. Key findings include high travel behavior scores (students: 8.1) and moderate commitment to carbon neutrality (staff: 7.8 at Dearborn). A color-coded legend shows significant increases or decreases. Logos at the bottom: Graham Sustainability Institute, Planet Blue, ISR.
New U-M survey led by ISR’s Bob Marans and Noah Webster with the Graham Sustainability Institute found that nearly 6,000 students, faculty, and staff across all three campuses report strong engagement with sustainable behaviors and climate awareness.
Read more: myumi.ch/y1Wy8
11.12.2025 16:42
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Free and available from these wonderful folks on Friday in person or online!
09.12.2025 01:15
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🧵/ Perceptions of falling #status have been hypothesized as a driver of worsening #mortality among #White adults in the U.S. over the last few decades.
Testing this #hypothesis is difficult.
But we think we have some #evidence in favor of it.
01.12.2025 17:16
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Beneath the dizzying complexity of the US health care system lie a few stylized facts that ensure that this system will fail to improve population health.
Thanks to @aschwartz.bsky.social, @rachelwerner.bsky.social and team for documenting one of these stylized facts.
30.11.2025 12:55
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Check out this 🧵 on our own @robertmanduca.bsky.social's work with @bhighsmith.bsky.social and Jacob Waggoner. 👇 #AcademicSky #WealthInequality
25.11.2025 13:20
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Easily taxed grains were crucial to the birth of the first states
The cultivation of wheat, barley and maize, which are easily stored and taxed, seems to have led to the emergence of large societies, rather than agriculture generally
What led to the emergence of the first states, thousands of years ago?
People often say agriculture, but the first large-scale societies didn't appear until 4000 years after the advent of agriculture. The answer may be growing grain, specifically. 🧪 #history
www.newscientist.com/article/2505...
25.11.2025 11:46
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New evidence that twin estimates of heritability should be adjusted downward by about half
22.11.2025 02:53
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