Lawrence M. Eppard, Kayla Dalhouse, Erik Nelson, Jenna Robbins
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Community Inequalities and Children’s Life Chances in the United States
This piece discusses the growing empirical evidence that the communities where American children spend their formative years—not just the households they are raised in but where those households are located—matter for their prospects of success in subsequent stages of their lives. The authors explore the various community characteristics—including social capital, family structure, school quality, and income—associated with educational attainment, health, teen pregnancy, social mobility, violence, crime victimization, and more.