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Angelika Gulbis is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Sociology at Bowling Green State University. Her area of specialization
is family sociology with a minor in social psychology. Angelika’s research interests include the life course transitions,
union formation, and fertility behaviors among emerging adults and the role of education and social class in these processes;
factors that affect elderly well-being; and social support in intergenerational relationships with a focus on race, social
class, and gender. Most recent projects include examinations of the social context for marriage, factors affecting well-being
among older prisoners, and differences in smoking behaviors and smoker characteristics between the U.S. and Canada. She is
currently teaching Principles of Sociology for the Chapman Learning Community at Bowling Green State University and Marriage
and the Family at Owens Community College in Toledo, Ohio. She will be teaching a service learning course on domestic violence
for the Chapman Learning Community in the spring of 2010. In addition, she is currently working as a field interviewer for
the National Opinion Research Center, conducting interviews for the next round of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth.
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