21 Search Results Found For : "천안룸싸롱「라인 uy454」라인 uy454 룸싸롱첫페이지도배 룸싸롱최상위작업↓룸싸롱키워드광고Ⓖ룸싸롱키워드홍보 ぐ㝪 sociologist"



U.S. West and South Are Set to Gain Political Clout

(2007) In the South, Texas, Florida, and Georgia are poised to gain seats in the U.S. House of Representatives after the 2010 Census.

View Details

Project: Center for Public Information on Population Research (CPIPR)

U.S. Teen Birth Rate Correlates With State Income Inequality

(2012) Despite declining rates, teen birth rates in the United States remain persistently high, at 34.4 births per 1,000 women ages 15 to 19.

View Details

Most Americans Marry Within Their Race

(2010) A recent survey found that young Americans ages 18 to 29 have nearly universal acceptance of interracial dating and marriage within their own families.

View Details

Health Effect of Marriage and Other Social Relationships

(June 2009) Social relationships keep older people healthy, and the marriage relationship is especially beneficial. A growing body of research helps explain how social interaction interacts with social, physical, and psychological factors that affect an individual's health, and the importance of maintaining social networks and relationships later in life.

View Details

U.S. Attitudes Toward Interracial Dating Are Liberalizing

(2005) As the United States population becomes ever more diverse, are more people dating across race lines? The question isn't simply a matter of whom you'll be going out with on Saturday night. Since interracial dating (or "interdating") and interracial marriage were outlawed or ostracized for so long in U.S. history, many sociologists see the incidence of these relationships as a key indicator of the state of U.S. race relations.

View Details

Changing Race and Ethnicity Questions on the U.S. Census Form Reflect Evolving Views

Census questions about race and ethnicity have evolved over time, as have Americans’ views about racial and ethnic identification.

View Details

Will Rising Childhood Obesity Decrease U.S. Life Expectancy?

(2005) A new study contends that rising childhood obesity rates will cut average U.S. life expectancy from birth by two to five years in the coming decades—a magnitude of decline last seen in the United States during the Great Depression.

View Details