$409,000 NIH grant strengthens research
efforts
BOWLING GREEN, O.—A new grant from the National Institutes
of Health will help advance research activities of the Center
for Family and Demographic Research at Bowling Green State
University.
The three-year, $409,000 NIH grant will be used to extend
work under way that utilizes demographic data as a component
of social science research. The research will focus on high-risk
populations and will include studies on immigration, health
and mortality, adolescent development and family structure.
The BGSU center, founded in 2000, is one of only 18 NIH-funded
population research centers in the country. The grants are
intended to strengthen and support these centers.
“In just two years we’ve been able to build a
viable center, one that pulls in participants from across
the campus community and results in powerful collaborations,”
said Center Director Dr. Wendy Manning, an associate professor
of sociology. “I’m pleased that everyone’s
hard work is being acknowledged with the NIH grant.”
According to Dr. Cynthia Price, director of Sponsored Programs
and Research at BGSU, “Federal support for strengthening
the infrastructure of this center marks a huge stride forward
for BGSU both in national recognition and in the potential
to attract additional funding. While establishing centers
of excellence is expected to be a time-consuming institutional
effort, concentrated efforts of the faculty members involved
in the center have moved the center ahead at an amazing rate.”
The center focuses on research related to the health, development
and security of children, adolescents and families. It is
supported by six BGSU departments and involves the work of
30 faculty members. The cross-disciplinary effort has already
resulted in a welfare reform conference, research collaborations
and the expansion of research agendas.
“With these additional resources we’ll be able
to increase the scope and impact of the center affiliates’
research,” said Dr. Laura Sanchez, associate director
of the center and an associate professor of sociology. “NIH
funding allows the center to further develop our research
support services and initiate a faculty development award
that provides seed-grant funds.”
The center, in addition to conducting original research, functions
as an Ohio state census data affiliate, helping researchers
and public policy makers interpret census and other data to
identify trends and make informed choices for their constituents.
It also provides valuable training opportunities and resources
to Bowling Green graduate students, Manning noted.
Current funded research projects include investigations of:
child well-being in cohabiting unions; life course transitions
in older adulthood in which grandparents are raising grandchildren;
non-residential fathers' socioeconomic ties to children; dating
relationships and adolescent fertility-related behaviors;
cross-generational influences on the development of aggression,
and whether covenant marriage might reduce the number of marriages
that end in divorce.
For more information about the Center for Family and Demographic
Research, visit www.bgsu.edu/organizations/cfdr/main.html
(Posted August 7, 2002)
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