Population Research Center


  • The Body’s Real-Time Response to Racism

    For the first time, researchers have recorded how the body responds when someone is confronted with racism or discrimination in the real world, providing new insight into health disparities in the United States and the stress experienced by students-of-color.

    The Body’s Real-Time Response to Racism

  • Scarred by Zika and fearing new COVID-19 variants, Brazilian women say no to another pandemic pregnancy

    “We have to avoid a pregnancy,” said Rosa, about the possibility of getting pregnant during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Scarred by Zika and fearing new COVID-19 variants, Brazilian women say no to another pandemic pregnancy

  • Celebrating a Lifetime of Achievement

    The American Sociological Association honors Jennifer Glass, Debra Umberson and Gloria González-López for their contributions to the field.

    Celebrating a Lifetime of Achievement

  • Shake Up Your Winter Reading

    Winter 2020-21 books from our college community.

    Shake Up Your Winter Reading

  • 2020 Vision: Examining Some of the Country’s Big Issues

    Experts from UT Austin’s College of Liberal Arts weigh in on some of the major issues facing our country and the president-elect over the next four years.

    2020 Vision: Examining Some of the Country’s Big Issues

  • Ticket to Read

    Fall 2020 books from our college community.

    Ticket to Read

  • Why Do People in Hawaii Live 7 Years Longer than People in Mississippi?

    Add living a longer life to the list of reasons to move to Hawaii, which tops the list in a national study on average life expectancy.

    Why Do People in Hawaii Live 7 Years Longer than People in Mississippi?

  • Grading Brain Health: How Educational Experiences Impact Cognitive Functioning Later in Life

    High school experiences follow you long after you’ve graduated, shaping your professional success and even your health. Now, researchers are investigating how it could contribute to your future brain health and maybe even impact your likelihood of getting Alzheimer’s Disease. University of Texas at Austin sociologist Chandra Muller researches how educational experiences shape life course…

    Grading Brain Health: How Educational Experiences Impact Cognitive Functioning Later in Life

  • UT Austin Launches Texas Aging & Longevity Center

    Not all people experience their twilight years in the same way. Some will be hearty triathletes traveling the world and writing novels, while others will be hobbled by chronic illness and dementia. Fifteen percent of Texans — nearly four million people — are aged 65 and older, and that number is growing. By 2040, older…

    UT Austin Launches Texas Aging & Longevity Center

  • Smile, You’re on Camera: Behind the Lens of 24/7 Surveillance

    “Even a strutting exhibitionist has something to hide: certain diary entries, genetic predispositions, financial mistakes, medical crises, teenage embarrassments, antisocial compulsions, sexual fantasies, radical dreams,” writes Randolph Lewis. “We all have something that we want to shield from public view. The real question is: Who gets to pull the curtains? And increasingly: How will we…

    Smile, You’re on Camera: Behind the Lens of 24/7 Surveillance

  • An Educated Decision

    Voter turnout in the U.S. is below turnout in most other advanced democracies, with only about 60 percent of eligible voters participating in the past four presidential elections and about 40 percent participating in midterm elections. While prior research indicates that those with higher levels of education are more likely to vote, new research shows…

    An Educated Decision

  • Your Turn to Do the Dishes

    Most young women – and men – prefer shared household responsibilities There’s no shortage of advice for women these days about how to balance work and family — everything from becoming a supermom who can “lean in” at the workplace and do it all, to embracing the role of a full-time homemaker. But when given…

    Your Turn to Do the Dishes

  • Depression: Making Treatment Personal

    For the estimated 350 million people worldwide who suffer from depression, the health consequences go far beyond “feeling down.” In fact, it is a leading cause of disability worldwide, according to the World Health Organization. Unfortunately, the vast majority of people with symptoms of depression will never receive treatment, and for those diagnosed with major…

    Depression: Making Treatment Personal

  • Borderline: The Politics, Law and Identity of Immigration

    Temperatures hovered around the triple digits in deep South Texas when the children arrived on the U.S.-Mexico border. They traveled alone, without parents. They traveled from the faraway mountains of Guatemala and El Salvador and the depths of the world’s most violent city — San Pedro Sula in Honduras. Their numbers grew over months until…

    Borderline: The Politics, Law and Identity of Immigration

  • The Benefits to Paid Family Leave That Nobody is Talking About

    This month marks 22 years since the passage of the Family and Medical Leave Act. The FMLA was an important first step toward improving the lives of American workers by helping them secure unpaid leave from their jobs for a variety of family issues, while protecting their employment security. But the FMLA left much to…

    The Benefits to Paid Family Leave That Nobody is Talking About

  • Early Poverty Linked to Obesity in Women

    Adolescent girls who grow up in poor households are more likely than their male counterparts to become overweight or obese, according to a new study by Tetyana Pudrovska, assistant professor of sociology. The study, published in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior, shows long-lasting consequences of economic hardship in childhood for the risk of…

    Early Poverty Linked to Obesity in Women

  • Keeping A Pulse On Population Health

    A few years ago, a Plan II Honors student in Marc Musick’s sociology lecture came to him with a question. Musick had been talking about the shortage of doctors in rural and inner city areas. The student had grown up in the Rio Grande Valley and hoped to go on to medical school. Why, he…

    Keeping A Pulse On Population Health

  • Making the Grade

    Strategies for Improving Education in America Few dispute the value of education, but discussions about how our nation should improve it are becoming more intense and polarized. Of all the competing arguments—more technology, smaller classrooms, improved teacher training, universal pre-kindergarten—most people would agree that America’s education system needs to improve, and soon. According to recent…

    Making the Grade

  • Regents Honor Outstanding Teaching

    Five faculty members from the College of Liberal Arts received the 2013 Regents’ Outstanding Teaching Award, the UT System Board of Regents’ highest teaching honor. The awards program is one of the nation’s largest monetary teaching recognition programs in higher education, honoring outstanding performance in the classroom and dedication to innovation in undergraduate instruction. The…

    Regents Honor Outstanding Teaching

  • High School and Beyond

    University of Texas at Austin sociologist and Population Research Center affiliate Chandra Muller and economist Sandra Black have received a $3.2 million grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation to study the effects of cognition on health, mortality, education and employment from high school and beyond. The three-year grant will support a Muller-led study that…

    High School and Beyond

  • Restore Rundberg

    Sociologist Works to Reduce Crime in Austin Neighborhood Struggles in the Rundberg neighborhood of Austin are evident at deteriorating apartments and trash-strewn vacant lots. But pride and hope are plentiful too, as many residents spruce up their homes, pitch in at community parks and enjoy new recreation centers. Alarming police statistics reveal another layer of…

    Restore Rundberg

  • A Space to Call Home

    Take a walk through the new College of Liberal Arts Building, and the building feels as fresh and modern as it feels warm and lived-in—an impressive feat for a place that just opened in January. “This is our shot at greatness,” says Randy Diehl, dean of the College of Liberal Arts. “This building ensures that…

    A Space to Call Home

  • Early Earners

    Economist looks at the long-term effects of school starting age and family background “Redshirting” is a popular term among parents of the pre-K set, and it has a lot of parents asking a familiar question: Is my child ready to start kindergarten, or would she or he benefit from delaying this debut into the world…

    Early Earners

  • How Long Will You Live? Chances Are…

    How long will you live? And how does that compare to your fellow longhorns based on your race and gender? Graduate researchers are striving to eliminate health barriers and extend life expectancy for one and all. Life expectancy in the United States is on the rise – but not for everyone. Although many older Americans…

    How Long Will You Live? Chances Are…

  • Research Briefs: Spring 2012

    College of Liberal Arts: Not Even Past Brings History to the Public The Web has many sites devoted to history, but only one brings together such a diverse group of historians with expertise in every major field and time period. For the past year, Not Even Past has drawn on the expertise of faculty and…

    Research Briefs: Spring 2012