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Call for Papers

Annual Meeting, Population Association of America


Deadline for Submissions: October 1, 2023

We welcome your submissions for the PAA2024 Annual Meeting and look forward to a full and
rigorous scientific conference next spring! PAA currently has no plans for a hybrid
conference and sessions will be in-person in Columbus, Ohio.

Please note a few important items:

• All accepted presenters will be required to register for the conference by February 5,
2024.
• Unfortunately, PAA cannot accommodate schedule requests; if your paper or poster is
accepted, it could be scheduled any time between Thursday, April 17 and Saturday, April
20.
• Please note that individuals can only serve as a presenting author twice on the program
(but can have additional roles such as chair or discussant).
• Organizers will not review papers from authors with whom they have a conflict of
interest (close collaborators or current students/postdocs). As such, please do not submit
your abstract to someone with whom you may have a conflict of interest.
• There will be no travel awards for PAA2024.

Thank you in advance for your submission; we are looking forward to a great annual meeting in
2024.

Sincerely,

Jennifer Glass and Susan L. Brown


PAA2024 Program Co-Chairs
Instructions for Submitting a Paper
Presenters, discussants, chairs and session organizers must register for the conference. All presenting
authors must pre-register for the conference by February 5, 2024 to confirm their intention to
attend and present. PAA members receive a preferred rate for annual meeting registration, and all
participants are strongly encouraged to join. Learn more about PAA membership online.

Online submissions will be made through the MiraSmart software submission system. Please use
this link https://submissions.mirasmart.com/PAA2024/Splash.aspx (the link will be live on or
about August 21 when submissions open).

Authors are asked to submit both: a) a short abstract (150 words); and b) either an extended abstract
(2-4 pages, including tables) or a completed paper. You may modify your submissions at any time
until the October 1, 2023 deadline. Extended abstracts must be sufficiently detailed to allow the
session organizer to judge the merits of the paper. Typically, extended abstracts consist of a statement
of the research question (and the underlying theory, if appropriate), the data and research methods,
and preliminary findings. If your submission is accepted for a regular session, you must upload the full
paper by March 27, 2024, to allow the discussant sufficient time to read it.

The PAA 2024 submission website will allow session organizers to view the titles and authors of
submitted abstracts as they are submitted. The author making the submission must provide the full
name, affiliation, country, and email address of each co-author. Please verify email addresses with
co-authors to avoid duplicate records, and to make sure that all of the co-authors’ submissions
appear under the same record.

At the time of submission, if there are multiple co-authors, one must be identified as the presenting
author. (See below for specification of PAA’s two-presenter rule.) This can be revised until the
program is finalized; you will be informed of the deadline via email.

As in the past, all sessions are numbered. If you wish to have your abstract considered by two
organizers, you must indicate the session numbers of your first and second choices. Two sessions is
the limit. The first designated organizer is given first right of acceptance. No paper/abstract may be
submitted to more than two sessions.

PAA 2024 will have some flash sessions that will consist of two parts. First, there will be an oral
“flash” presentation (4-6 minutes in length) of each paper. Second, authors will display posters with
an informal discussion at each poster.

Submissions to either regular sessions or flash sessions can also be considered as candidates for a
poster session. This option is offered during the online submission process.

In addition to the sessions listed in this Call for Papers, approximately 100 “overflow” sessions will be
created at the request of session organizers who receive large numbers of submissions. In choosing
where to submit your paper, keep in mind that session organizers with broad session titles may end up
organizing two or three sessions.

Instructions for Submitting a Poster


Members are encouraged to submit abstracts/papers for consideration as posters. All the above
instructions also apply to poster submissions. Authors who wish to have a submission considered
only for a poster session should submit to Session 1602. This may be a particularly good option for
papers that do not fit into any regular or flash sessions.
An author who is submitting a paper to one or two regular sessions, or a regular session and a flash
session, may ask that the submission also be considered for a poster session if it is not accepted in the
regular or flash session. This is accomplished by checking “yes” in the appropriate box of the online
submission form. Unless you check “yes,” your paper will not be considered for a poster.

Two-Presentations Rule
The PAA Board of Directors has instituted a two-presentations rule, i.e., each person is limited to a
maximum of two presentations (summed across regular oral sessions, flash sessions and poster
sessions). A further rule is a limit of four appearances in total, encompassing the roles of presenter,
chair, and discussant. But there is no limit on how many times a person can appear on the program as a
co-author. Single-authored papers must be presented by the author. For multiple-authored papers, at the
time of submission a presenter must be designated; once all sessions are finalized (that is, all papers and
posters have been accepted or rejected), there will be a short time interval when presenter status can be
revised. Note that for the purpose of the two-presentations rule, the roles of chair and discussant do not
count; instead, there is a limit of four presentations in the roles of presenter, chair, and discussant
inclusive.

Important Dates*
August 21, 2023 PAA opens for submissions
October 1, 2023 (midnight PST) PAA closes to submissions
November 27-December 1, 2023 Authors are notified of papers accepted
into regular and flash sessions
December 6 – 10, 2023 Authors are notified of papers accepted into
overflow sessions
December 4, 2023 Registration open
December 18-22, 2023 Authors are notified of papers accepted
into poster sessions
February 7, 2024 Deadline for presenting authors, chairs
and discussants to register
March 27, 2024 Deadline for making online revisions to
abstracts of accepted papers
March 27, 2024 Deadline to upload full papers

*Dates subject to change. If you have questions, please contact bobbie@popassoc.org.

ATTENTION! PAA has recently installed a new system that affects how you log in to our website
and perform transactions. If you have not already done so, you will need to set up a new login to the
PAA website. Here’s how: Click this link to identify yourself and you will receive a “change
password” e-mail. That message will contain your new username and a link to change your password.
PAA 2024 Sessions and Organizers
To submit a paper to PAA 2024, please visit the submissions website at
https://submissions.mirasmart.com/PAA2024/Splash.aspx. (Link will be live once submissions open.)

1 Aging and Life Course 110 Family Ties, Social Networks, and Social
Isolation Across the Life Course
101 Flash: Socioeconomic Disparities and Patricia Thomas
Under-Represented Populations in Aging and Purdue University
Health
Catherine Garcia 2 Applied Demography
Syracuse University
201 The Role of Consumer Data in
102 Gendered Experiences in Life Course and Demographic Estimates
Aging Francesco Rampazzo
Adrianne Frech University of Oxford
Ohio University
202 Population Stagnation: Causes,
103 Aging and Intergenerational Consequences, and Combatants
Relationships Reynolds Farley
Zhiyong Lin University of Michigan
University of Texas at San Antonio
203 Flash: Challenges in Small Area
104 Flash: Cognitive Health and Dementia Demography: True Population Change or
Mateo Farina Data Changes?
University of Texas at Austin Xiuhong You
University of Texas at San Antonio
105 Mental Health and Mental Health
Services in Old Age 3 Children, Youth and Intergenerational Ties
Mieke Thomeer
Univiversity of Alabama 301 Inequality in Early Childhood
Kelly Purtell
106 Biopsychosocial and Biodemographic Ohio State University
Approaches to Aging
Bridget Goosby 302 Children, Adolescents, and Mental
University of Texas at Austin Health
Ashley Larsen Gibby
107 Innovative Topics in Aging and the Life Brigham Young University
Course
Deborah Carr 303 Transitions to Adulthood
Boston University Phoebe Ho
University of North Texas
108 Aging in Middle- and Low-Income
Countries 304 Intergenerational Processes, Parenting,
Joseph Saenz and Child Well-being
Arizona State University Rachel Goldberg
University of California, Irvine
109 Caregiving and Healthcare Across the
Life Course 305 Neighborhood Contexts and the Well-
Sarah Patterson being of Children and Youth
University of Michigan Narayan Sastry
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
306 Child Policy, Welfare, and Protective 5 Data and Methods
Services
Hope Harvey 501 Formal and Mathematical Demography
University of Kentucky Arun Hendi
Princeton University
307 Race/Ethnicity, Immigration, and Child
Well-being 502 Statistical and Bayesian Methods in
Claire Altman Demography
University of Missouri Scott Lynch
Duke University
308 Environmental/Climate Change, Natural
Disaster, and the Well-Being of Children and 503 Digital and Computational Demography
Youth Emilio Zagheni
Lingxin Hao Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
Johns Hopkins University
504 Innovations in Spatial Data Collection
309 Parental Relationship Dynamics and and Analysis
Child Outcomes Catherine Calder
Monica Longmore University of Texas at Austin
Bowling Green State University
505 Causal Inference in Population Studies
310 Flash: Changes in Parents and Children's Jennie Brand
Lives Following the Pandemic University of California, Los Angeles
Deniz Yucel
William Paterson University 506 Advances in Mortality Estimation
without Vital Records
4 Crime and the Criminal Legal System Stéphane Helleringer
NYU Abu Dhabi
401 Criminal Legal Contact and Health
Inequality 507 Demographic Models of Infectious
Armando Lara-Millan Disease
University of California, Berkeley Malia Jones
University of Wisconsin-Madison
402 Methodological Innovations in Studying
the Criminal Legal System 508 Critical Demographic Methods
Bryan Sykes Quincy Stewart
University of California, Irvine Northwestern University

403 Immigration and the Criminal Legal Tukufu Zuberi


System University of Pennsylvania
Caitlin Patler
University of California, Davis 509 Flash: Innovations in Data Infrastructure
for Population Research
404 Geographic Context and Consequences of Casey Breen
Criminal Legal Contact University of California, Berkeley
Carmen Gutierrez
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
6 Education, Work and Economic Inequality
611 Care Work and Inequality
601 Economic Instability, Unemployment, Rachel Dwyer
and Social Policy. The Ohio State University
Julie Cai
Center for Economic and Policy Research 612 History and the Political Economy of
Inequality
602 Employment Discrimination and Christopher Muller
Segregation: Causes, Consequences, and University of California, Berkeley
Contexts.
David Pedulla 613 Flash: Gender Inequality
Harvard University Janet Kuo
National Taiwan University
603 Inequalities in Work Hours and Leisure
Time 614 Remote Work, Families, and Inequality
Sarah James Eiko Strader
US Census The George Washington University

604 Racial Inequality in Urban and Rural 615 Flash: Economic Inequality: Patterns,
America Causes and Effects
Shuang Li Ken-Hou Lin
Bridgewater College University of Texas at Austin

605 LGBTQIA Employment and Education 7 Family Demography


Christopher Carpenter
Vanderbilt 701 Gender, Families, and Unpaid Labor
Liana Sayer
606 Incarceration and Economic Inequality University of Maryland
Evelyn Patterson
Georgetown University 702 Flash: Gender, Families, and Work
Kelly Musick
607 Developments in the Study of Social Cornell University
Inequality: Intersectionality, Categories, and
Classification 703 Families and Inequalities
Christy Erving Regina Baker
University of Texas at Austin University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

608 Wealth, Debt, and Life Chances 704 Families, Health and Wellbeing
Michelle Maroto Patricia Louie
University of Alberta University of Washington

609 Flash: Educational Inequality: Patterns, 705 Union Formation


Causes, and Effects Krista Westrick-Payne
Jayanti Owens Bowling Green State University
Yale University
706 Mate Selection
610 Poverty, Policy, and Economic Well- Kate Choi
being Western University
Christopher Wimer
Columbia University
707 Kinship and Intergenerational Relations 8 Fertility, Family Planning, Sexual Behavior,
Diego Alburez-Gutierrez and Reproductive Health
Max Planck Institute
801 Abortion
708 Comparative and International Angel Foster
Perspectives on Families University of Ottawa
Wei-hsin Yu
University of California, Los Angeles Dana Johnson
University of Texas at Austin
709 Changing Families and Households
Megan Sweeney 802 Contraception and Sterilization
University of California, Los Angeles Krystale Littlejohn
University of Oregon
710 Race, Ethnicity and Families
Christina Cross 803 Sex
Harvard University Michelle Eilers
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
711 Families, Law and Public Policy
Laura Tach 804 Infertility and Assisted Reproductive
Cornell University Technologies
Katherine Tierney
712 Union Dissolution and Instability Western Michigan University
Christine Schwartz
University of Wisconsin-Madison 805 Fertility Goals (Preferences, Desires,
Intentions, Attitudes)
713 Consequences of Criminal Legal Contact Jonathan Bearak
for Family Life Guttmacher Institute
Kristen Turney
University of California, Irvine 806 Flash: Birth Intervals and Birth Timing
Thomas Moultrie
714 Nonmarital Partnerships in Midlife and University of Cape Town
Beyond
Matthew Wright 807 Sexually Transmitted Infections
Appalacian State University Sara Yeatman
University of Colorado Denver
715 Critical Family Demography
Deadric Williams 808 Adolescent Fertility and Reproductive
University of Tennessee Knoxville Health
Holly Baker Shakya
716 Families and Fertility University of California, San Diego
Alison Gemmill
Johns Hopkins Universioty 809 Men's Fertility, Reproductive Health,
and Sexual Behavior
717 Family Caregiving Gladys Martinez
Esther Friedman National Center for Health Statistics
University of Michigan
810 Queer Fertility, Family Building, and
718 Singlehood Reproductive Health
Xing Zhang JaNelle Ricks
Arizona State University The Ohio State University
811 Migration, Migrants, and Fertility and 821 Flash: Contraception and Abortion
Reproductive Health Service Delivery, Access, and Quality
Goleen Samari Maria Gallo
Columbia University The Ohio State University

812 Fertility in Low- and Middle-Income 822 Stratified Reproduction: Inequality and
Countries Inequity in Fertility and Reproductive Health
Raquel Coutinho Leigh Senderowicz
Cedeplar University of Wisconsin-Madison

813 Low Fertility: Causes, Consequences, and 823 Pronatalism, Antinatalism, and
Variation Reproductive Control
Yong Cai Emily Marshall
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Franklin and Marshall University

814 Life Course Perspectives on Fertility and 9 Gender and Sexuality


Reproductive Health
Jessica Su 901 Transgender and Gender Expansive
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Demography
Rin Reczek
815 Reproductive Justice The Ohio State University
Andrea Becker
Advancing New Standards in Reproductive 902 Intersectionality and Gender & Sexual
Health Minority Populations
Allen Mallory
816 Flash: Contextual Influences on Fertility, The Ohio State University
Contraception, and Abortion
Chiara Comolli 903 Gender Inequality Across National
University of Bologna Contexts
Blake Zachary
817 Couple, Household, and Kin Influences Demographic and Health Surveys
on Fertility, Contraception, and Abortion
James Stykes 904 Gender and Sexuality Based Violence
Sam Houston State University Patricia Lewis
Sacred Heart University
818 Climate Change and Fertility and
Reproductive Health 905 Flash: Innovative Methods in
Raya Muttarak Demographic Research on Gender and
University of Bologna Sexual Minorities
Stephanie Hernandez
819 Shocks, Disruption, and Fertility and Drexel University
Reproductive Health
Florencia Torche 906 Development Across the Life Course for
Stanford University LGBTQ+ Populations
Jessica Fish
820 Cross-National Comparisons of Fertility, University of Maryland
Contraception, and Abortion
Sarah Brauner-Otto
McGill University
10 Health and Health Behavior 1010 Flash: Innovations in Data Linkages for
Population-Based Surveys
1001 Politics, Public Policy, and Population Sara Riese
Health ICF/The DHS Program
Courtney Boen
University of Pennsylvania 1011 Flash: Health Inequalities in Low and
Middle Income Countries
Yezhen Li Kammi Schmeer
University of Pennsylvania Ohio State University

1002 Rural Health and Wellbeing in North 1012 LGBTQ+ Health


America Ning Hsieh
Shannon Monnat Michigan State University
Syracuse University
11 Migration, Immigration, and Urbanization
1003 Climate Change, Environmental
Inequality, and Health 1101 Migration and Aging: National and
Kerry Ard Global Perspectives
Ohio State University Jenjira Yahirun
Bowling Green State University
1004 Historical Structural Racism and
Minority Health Disparities 1102 Internal Migration
Samantha Friedman Brian Thiede
University at Albany, SUNY Penn State University

1005 Health "Paradoxes" and their 1103 Residential Mobility: Causes and
Underlying Mechanisms Consequences
Max Coleman Benjamin Jarvis
Indiana University Linkoping University

1006 The Global Pace of Chronic Diseases 1104 Urbanization


Ronny Westerman Guy Stecklov
Federal Institute for Population Research University of British Columbia

1007 Public Mental Health 1105 Emerging Issues in Climate Migration


Joshua Grove Clark Gray
Syracuse University University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

1008 Flash: Trends in Child Health and 1106 Migration: New Data and Empirical
Health Behaviors Approaches
Kelly Balistreri Juan Pedroza
Bowling Green State University University of California, Santa Cruz

1009 Intersectionality and Health Disparities 1107 International Migration


Patricia Homan Christian Paredes
Florida State University Loyola University Chicago

1108 Immigration and Integration


Tod Hamilton
Princeton University
1207 Mortality Trends and Patterns
1109 Unauthorized Immigration Andrea Tilstra
Rene Zenteno Oxford University
University of Texas at San Antonio
1208 Racial/Ethnic Inequalities in Morbidity
1110 Demography of Refugees and Asylees and Mortality
Matthew Hall Taylor Hargrove
Cornell University University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

1111 Immigration and Family Dynamics 1209 Geographic Patterns in Morbidity and
Erin Hamilton Mortality
University of California, Davis Michal Engelman
University of Wisconsin–Madison
1112 Flash: Immigration, Public Policy, and
Politics 1210 Social Networks, Social Support, and
Marta Tienda Health
Princeton University Rachel Donnelly
Vanderbilt University
12 Mortality and Morbidity
1211 Socioeconomic Inequalities in Health
1201 Psychosocial and Mental Health and Mortality
Influences on Morbidity and Mortality Mark Hayward
Parvati Singh University of Texas at Austin
The Ohio State University
1212 Infant and Child Health
1202 Injury, Poisoning and Other External Tim Bruckner
Causes of Mortality and Morbidity University of California, Irvine
Muntasir Masum
Pennsylvania State University 1213 Race and Inequality in Maternal
Morbidity and Mortality
1203 Environmental and Climate Influences Deborah Karasek
on Morbidity and Mortality Oregon Health Sciences University
Lori Hunter
University of Colorado Boulder 13 Neighborhoods, Communities, and Spatial
Demography
1204 Political, Economic and Institutional
Antecedents of Morbidity/Mortality 1301 Mobility, Neighborhoods, and Wellbeing
Atheendar Venkataramani Michael Bader
University of Pennsylvania Johns Hopkins University

1205 Biosocial Approaches to 1302 Place Connectedness and Mobility


Morbidity/Mortality Flows
Yuan Zhang Noli Brazil
Columbia University University of California, Davis

1206 Epidemic and Pandemic Mortality and 1303 Segregation & Spatial Inequality
Morbidity Elizabeth Roberto
Svenn-Erik Mamelund Rice University
Oslo Me University
1304 Flash: New Developments in Spatial 1404 Environmental Influences on Mortality
Demography and Morbidity in Low- and Middle-Income
Tom VanHeuvelen Countries
University of Minnesota Aashish Gupta
University of Oxford
1305 Housing & Housing Instability
Kristin Perkins 15 Race and Ethnicity
Georgetown University
1501 Race, Racism, and Demography
1306 Spatial Demography of Environment & Mosi Ifatunji
Climate Risk University of Wisconsin
Elizabeth Fussell
Brown University 1502 Racial Classification and Boundary-
Making
14 Population, Development & Environment Marissa Thompson
Columbia University
1401 Flash: Climate Change and Population
Health in Low-Income Settings 1503 Race/Ethnicity, Phenotype, and
Ethan Raker Inequality
University of British Columbia Mathew Painter
University of North Texas
1402 Implications of Long-Term Population
Change for Environmental Outcomes, 1504 Flash: Racial Equity and Innovation in
Economic Development, and Wellbeing Quantitative Methods
Sangita Vyas Yasmiyn Irizarry
Hunter College University of Texas at Austin

1403 Political Demography: The Political 16 Other


Origin and Consequences of Population
Change 1601 Other Topics (Use only if no regular
Yao Lu session is appropriate for your submission.)
Columbia University Jennifer Glass
University of Texas at Austin

1602 Poster Sessions (Use for submissions to


be considered only as a poster.)
Susan L. Brown
Bowling Green State University

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