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Search resuls for: "More About Claire Cain Miller"


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The first data on births since Roe v. Wade was overturned shows how much abortion bans have had their intended effect: Births increased in every state with a ban, an analysis of the data shows. Until now, studies have shown that many women in states with bans have ended their pregnancies anyway, by traveling to other states or ordering pills online. What they have been unable to show is how many women have not done so, and carried their pregnancies to term. “The importance of our results is when you take away access, it can affect fertility,” said Daniel Dench, an economist at Georgia Tech and an author of the paper with Mayra Pineda-Torres of Georgia Tech and Caitlin Myers of Middlebury College. “When you make it harder, women can’t always get out of states to obtain abortion.”
Persons: Roe, Wade, , , Daniel Dench, Mayra Pineda, Torres, Caitlin Myers, can’t Organizations: Institute of Labor, Georgia Tech, Torres of Georgia Tech, Middlebury College
She left her job at Walmart because it was too physical, but her current job is mentally taxing. Nearly every Republican in the poll rated the economy unfavorably, and 59 percent of Democrats did. Steven Cabrera, 35, who works for the military in Phoenix, was among the 57 percent of voters who said economic issues were a bigger priority than societal ones. He wanted to know: Is that the reason our economy is “slowing down?” He wasn’t sure, but he thought it might be. He plans to vote for “the Republican, any Republican,” he said.
Persons: Suzanne Haberkorn, won’t, , Steven Cabrera, Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, Organizations: Walmart, Research, Republican Locations: Waukesha, Wis, Phoenix, Alexandria Ocasio Cortez of New York, Ukraine
Some said he was too old, or they didn’t think he’d done much as president. Black voters in particular said they didn’t believe he was doing enough to help Black Americans. Though many said they’d probably vote for Mr. Trump, nearly all said that they weren’t excited about either option, and that Mr. Trump had personally offended them. A telephone call with a New York Times reporter is not the same as a conversation with friends or family. But it was an opportunity for a group of voters, some of them relatively disengaged, to think about the candidates, issues and campaigns.
Persons: Biden, they’d, Trump, hadn’t, It’s, Harris, Bridgette Miro, Organizations: Mr, New York Times Locations: Glendale, Ariz
Julia Keintz took a job leading analytics at Zillow two years ago, when her children were 6 months and 11. One of the reasons she wanted the job, she said, was that since the pandemic, Zillow has allowed employees to live where they want and work flexible schedules. She can give her older child an after-school snack and drive him to sports practices and bar mitzvah preparations. “Zillow is the first company I worked for where flexibility is an outwardly stated thing.”The share of women working in the United States increased rapidly starting in the 1970s, with the women’s movement. Economists have attributed this to the lack of family-friendly policies in the United States, like paid leave and subsidized child care.
Persons: Julia Keintz, Zillow, Ms, Keintz, “ Zillow Locations: San Francisco, United States
In the 12 months after the Dobbs decision in June 2022, there were on average 82,298 abortions a month, compared with 82,115 in the two months before Dobbs, WeCount found. The new data, released Tuesday, included 83 percent of known providers, and researchers estimated the remainder based on historical trends and abortion data from states. The report does not include abortions outside the U.S. medical system — such as ordering abortion pills from abroad or traveling across the border. The biggest increases in legal abortions occurred in states that border those with bans, suggesting that many patients traveled across state lines. In Florida, which bars abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy but is surrounded by states with stricter bans, abortions were up 28 percent, to 7,705.
Persons: Dobbs, WeCount, Abigail Aiken, Alexia Rice, Henry Organizations: Society of Family, Guttmacher, University of Texas, ARC Locations: Austin, New Mexico, Illinois, Florida
The American workers who have had their careers upended by automation in recent decades have largely been less educated, especially men working in manufacturing. But the new kind of automation — artificial intelligence systems called large language models, like ChatGPT and Google’s Bard — is changing that. The jobs most exposed to automation now are office jobs, those that require more cognitive skills, creativity and high levels of education. The workers affected are likelier to be highly paid, and slightly likelier to be women, a variety of research has found. In a majority of jobs, the models could do some of the tasks, found the analyses, including from Pew Research Center and Goldman Sachs.
Persons: Bard —, “ It’s, , Erik Brynjolfsson, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Stanford Institute for, Labor, Pew Research Center
It has been well established that legacies have an advantage in elite college admissions. But the new data was the first to quantify it by analyzing internal admissions records. They used more recent data, including the income tax records of graduates of the dozen top colleges in the study, to analyze their post-college outcomes. They estimated that legacy students were no more likely than other graduates to make it into the top 1 percent of earners, attend an elite graduate school or work at a prestigious firm. “This isn’t about unqualified students getting in,” said Michael Hurwitz, who leads policy research at the College Board and has done research on legacy admissions that found similar patterns.
Persons: Friedman, Raj Chetty, David J . Deming, Harvard —, , Michael Hurwitz, Biden Organizations: Harvard, College Board, Civil Rights, Education Department
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