Frontiers in Social Science features new research in the flagship journals of the Social Science Research Council’s founding disciplinary associations. Every month we publish a new selection of articles from the most recent issues of these journals, marking the rapid advance of the frontiers of social and behavioral science.

Impacts of prenatal care across generations

Medicaid expansions between 1975 and 1988 enabling access to prenatal care improved health outcomes not only for babies born to newly enrolled mothers, but also for their children.

Author(s)
Chloe N. East, Sarah Miller, Marianne Page, and Laura R. Wherry
Journal
American Economic Review
Citation
East, Chloe N., Sarah Miller, Marianne Page, and Laura R. Wherry. 2023. "Multigenerational Impacts of Childhood Access to the Safety Net: Early Life Exposure to Medicaid and the Next Generation's Health." American Economic Review, 113 (1): 98-135. Copy
Abstract

We examine multigenerational impacts of positive in utero health interventions using a new research design that exploits sharp increases in prenatal Medicaid eligibility that occurred in some states. Our analyses are based on US Vital Statistics natality files, which enables linkages between individuals' early life Medicaid exposure and the next generation's health at birth. We find evidence that the health benefits associated with treated generations' early life program exposure extend to later offspring. Our results suggest that the returns on early life health investments may be substantively underestimated.

The effects of divorce on turnout

The differential timing of divorces relative to elections reveals that divorce disproportionately reduces male turnout in Sweden, primarily due to the absence of spousal mobilization.

Author(s)
Sirus H. Dehdari, Karl-oskar Lindgren, Sven Oskarsson, and Kåre Vernby
Journal
American Political Science Review
Citation
DEHDARI, S., LINDGREN, K., OSKARSSON, S., & VERNBY, K. (2022). The Ex-Factor: Examining the Gendered Effect of Divorce on Voter Turnout. American Political Science Review, 116(4), 1293-1308. doi:10.1017/S0003055422000144 Copy
Abstract

The absence of a gendered analysis of the effect of marriage on voting is surprising given researchers’ cognizance of the heterogeneous effects of marriage on a range of other social outcomes. In this paper, we shed new light on spousal dependency by studying the gendered effect of marital disruption, in the form of divorce, on voter turnout. First, drawing on Swedish populationwide data, we use the differential timing of divorces in relation to general elections to generate more credible estimates of the causal effect of divorce on turnout. Second, although we find that both sexes are adversely affected by divorce, we show that the effect is much more pronounced for men. Specifically, the long-term effect is almost twice as large for men. Finally, we use these data to show that the gendered effect of divorce is mainly driven by asymmetrical spousal mobilization due to higher levels of turnout among women.

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