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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Selected Works

Andrew Sum

Young adults

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

The Demise Of The Summer Job Market For The Nation’S Youngest Teens (16-17) And The Depressed Jobs Market For Low Income Teens: The Case For A National Public Policy Response, Andrew Sum, Ishwar Khatiwada, Joseph Mclaughlin Aug 2013

The Demise Of The Summer Job Market For The Nation’S Youngest Teens (16-17) And The Depressed Jobs Market For Low Income Teens: The Case For A National Public Policy Response, Andrew Sum, Ishwar Khatiwada, Joseph Mclaughlin

Andrew Sum

No abstract provided.


National Teen Summer Employment Rate Drops To New Low; Summer 2007 Lowest June-July Employment Rate For Teens In Post-World War Ii History; Black And Low Income Teens Face Bleakest Job Prospects, Andrew Sum, Joseph Mclaughlin Aug 2013

National Teen Summer Employment Rate Drops To New Low; Summer 2007 Lowest June-July Employment Rate For Teens In Post-World War Ii History; Black And Low Income Teens Face Bleakest Job Prospects, Andrew Sum, Joseph Mclaughlin

Andrew Sum

No abstract provided.


Out With The Young And In With The Old : U.S. Labor Markets 2000-2008 And The Case For An Immediate Jobs Creation Program For Teens And Young Adults, Andrew Sum, Joseph Mclaughlin Apr 2012

Out With The Young And In With The Old : U.S. Labor Markets 2000-2008 And The Case For An Immediate Jobs Creation Program For Teens And Young Adults, Andrew Sum, Joseph Mclaughlin

Andrew Sum

No abstract provided.


The Collapse Of The National Teen Job Market And The Case For An Immediate Summer And Year Round Youth Jobs Creation Program, Andrew Sum, Ishwar Khatiwada, Joseph Mclaughlin Apr 2012

The Collapse Of The National Teen Job Market And The Case For An Immediate Summer And Year Round Youth Jobs Creation Program, Andrew Sum, Ishwar Khatiwada, Joseph Mclaughlin

Andrew Sum

Deteriorating teen employment rates during a growing national labor market is unprecedented. Declines in teen employment rates over the past seven years (2000-2007) have been widespread across age, gender, race-ethnic, educational attainment, household income, and geographic subgroups.