til Australia’s Obligations Still Apply Despite High Court Win By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 30 Nov -0001 00:00:00 +0000 Full Article
til Social mobility: A promise that could still be kept By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Fri, 29 Jul 2016 10:47:00 -0400 As a rhetorical ideal, greater opportunity is hard to beat. Just about all candidates for high elected office declare their commitments to promoting opportunity – who, after all, could be against it? But opportunity is, to borrow a term from the philosopher and political theorist Isaiah Berlin, a "protean" word, with different meanings for different people at different times. Typically, opportunity is closely entwined with an idea of upward mobility, especially between generations. The American Dream is couched in terms of a daughter or son of bartenders or farm workers becoming a lawyer, or perhaps even a U.S. senator. But even here, there are competing definitions of upward mobility. It might mean being better off than your parents were at a similar age. This is what researchers call "absolute mobility," and largely relies on economic growth – the proverbial rising tide that raises most boats. Or it could mean moving to a higher rung of the ladder within society, and so ending up in a better relative position than one's parents. Scholars label this movement "relative mobility." And while there are many ways to think about status or standard of living – education, wealth, health, occupation – the most common yardstick is household income at or near middle age (which, somewhat depressingly, tends to be defined as 40). As a basic principle, we ought to care about both kinds of mobility as proxies for opportunity. We want children to have the chance to do absolutely and relatively well in comparison to their parents. On the One Hand… So how are we doing? The good news is that economic standards of living have improved over time. Most children are therefore better off than their parents. Among children born in the 1970s and 1980s, 84 percent had higher incomes (even after adjusting for inflation) than their parents did at a similar age, according to a Pew study. Absolute upward income mobility, then, has been strong, and has helped children from every income class, especially those nearer the bottom of the ladder. More than 9 in 10 of those born into families in the bottom fifth of the income distribution have been upwardly mobile in this absolute sense. There's a catch, though. Strong absolute mobility goes hand in hand with strong economic growth. So it is quite likely that these rates of generational progress will slow, since the potential growth rate of the economy has probably diminished. This risk is heightened by an increasingly unequal division of the proceeds of growth in recent years. Today's parents are certainly worried. Surveys show that they are far less certain than earlier cohorts that their children will be better off than they are. If the story on absolute mobility may be about to turn for the worse, the picture for relative mobility is already pretty bad. The basic message here: pick your parents carefully. If you are born to parents in the poorest fifth of the income distribution, your chance of remaining stuck in that income group is around 35 to 40 percent. If you manage to be born into a higher-income family, the chances are similarly good that you will remain there in adulthood. It would be wrong, however, to say that class positions are fixed. There is still a fair amount of fluidity or social mobility in America – just not as much as most people seem to believe or want. Relative mobility is especially sticky in the tails at the high and low end of the distribution. Mobility is also considerably lower for blacks than for whites, with blacks much less likely to escape from the bottom rungs of the ladder. Equally ominously, they are much more likely to fall down from the middle quintile. Relative mobility rates in the United States are lower than the rhetoric about equal opportunity might suggest and lower than people believe. But are they getting worse? Current evidence suggests not. In fact, the trend line for relative mobility has been quite flat for the past few decades, according to work by Raj Chetty of Stanford and his co-researchers. It is simply not the case that the amount of intergenerational relative mobility has declined over time. Whether this will remain the case as the generations of children exposed to growing income inequality mature is not yet clear, though. As one of us (Sawhill) has noted, when the rungs on the ladder of opportunity grow further apart, it becomes more difficult to climb the ladder. To the same point, in his latest book, Our Kids – The American Dream in Crisis, Robert Putnam of Harvard argues that the growing gaps not just in income but also in neighborhood conditions, family structure, parenting styles and educational opportunities will almost inevitably lead to less social mobility in the future. Indeed, these multiple disadvantages or advantages are increasingly clustered, making it harder for children growing up in disadvantaged circumstances to achieve the dream of becoming middle class. The Geography of Opportunity Another way to assess the amount of mobility in the United States is to compare it to that found in other high-income nations. Mobility rates are highest in Scandinavia and lowest in the United States, Britain and Italy, with Australia, Western Europe and Canada lying somewhere in between, according to analyses by Jo Blanden, of the University of Surrey and Miles Corak of the University of Ottawa. Interestingly, the most recent research suggests that the United States stands out most for its lack of downward mobility from the top. Or, to paraphrase Billie Holiday, God blesses the child that's got his own. Any differences among countries, while notable, are more than matched by differences within Pioneering work (again by Raj Chetty and his colleagues) shows that some cities have much higher rates of upward mobility than others. From a mobility perspective, it is better to grow up in San Francisco, Seattle or Boston than in Atlanta, Baltimore or Detroit. Families that move to these high-mobility communities when their children are still relatively young enhance the chances that the children will have more education and higher incomes in early adulthood. Greater mobility can be found in places with better schools, fewer single parents, greater social capital, lower income inequality and less residential segregation. However, the extent to which these factors are causes rather than simply correlates of higher or lower mobility is not yet known. Scholarly efforts to establish why it is that some children move up the ladder and others don't are still in their infancy. Models of Mobility What is it about their families, their communities and their own characteristics that determine why they do or do not achieve some measure of success later in life? To help get at this vital question, the Brookings Institution has created a life-cycle model of children's trajectories, using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth on about 5,000 children from birth to age 40. (The resulting Social Genome Model is now a partnership among three institutions: Brookings, the Urban Institute and Child Trends). Our model tracks children's progress through multiple life stages with a corresponding set of success measures at the end of each. For example, children are considered successful at the end of elementary school if they have mastered basic reading and math skills and have acquired the behavioral or non-cognitive competencies that have been shown to predict later success. At the end of adolescence, success is measured by whether the young person has completed high school with a GPA average of 2.5 or better and has not been convicted of a crime or had a baby as a teenager. These metrics capture common-sense intuition about what drives success. But they are also aligned with the empirical evidence on life trajectories. Educational achievement, for example, has a strong effect on later earnings and income, and this well-known linkage is reflected in the model. We have worked hard to adjust for confounding variables but cannot be sure that all such effects are truly causal. We do know that the model does a good job of predicting or projecting later outcomes. Three findings from the model stand out. First, it's clear that success is a cumulative process. According to our measures, a child who is ready for school at age 5 is almost twice as likely to be successful at the end of elementary school as one who is not. This doesn't mean that a life course is set in stone this early, however. Children who get off track at an early age frequently get back on track at a later age; it's just that their chances are not nearly as good. So this is a powerful argument for intervening early in life. But it is not an argument for giving up on older youth. Second, the chances of clearing our last hurdle – being middle class by middle age (specifically, having an income of around $68,000 for a family of four by age 40) – vary quite significantly. A little over half of all children born in the 1980s and 1990s achieved this goal. But those who are black or born into low-income families were very much less likely than others to achieve this benchmark. Third, the effect of a child's circumstances at birth is strong. We use a multidimensional measure here, including not just the family's income but also the mother's education, the marital status of the parents and the birth weight of the child. Together, these factors have substantial effects on a child's subsequent success. Maternal education seems especially important. The Social Genome Model, then, is a useful tool for looking under the hood at why some children succeed and others don't. But it can also be used to assess the likely impact of a variety of interventions designed to improve upward mobility. For one illustrative simulation, we hand-picked a battery of programs shown to be effective at different life stages – a parenting program, a high-quality early-edcation program, a reading and socio-emotional learning program in elementary school, a comprehensive high school reform model – and assessed the possible impact for low-income children benefiting from each of them, or all of them. No single program does very much to close the gap between children from lower- and higher-income families. But the combined effects of multiple programs – that is, from intervening early and often in a child's life – has a surprisingly big impact. The gap of almost 20 percentage points in the chances of low-income and high-income children reaching the middle class shrinks to six percentage points. In other words, we are able to close about two-thirds of the initial gap in the life chances of these two groups of children. The black-white gap narrows, too. Looking at the cumulative impact on adult incomes over a working life (all appropriately discounted with time) and comparing these lifetime income benefits to the costs of the programs, we believe that such investments would pass a cost-benefit test from the perspective of society as a whole and even from the narrower prospective of the taxpayers who fund the programs. What Now? Understanding the processes that lie beneath the patterns of social mobility is critical. It is not enough to know how good the odds of escaping are for a child born into poverty. We want to know why. We can never eliminate the effects of family background on an individual's life chances. But the wide variation among countries and among cities in the U.S. suggests that we could do better – and that public policy may have an important role to play. Models like the Social Genome are intended to assist in that endeavor, in part by allowing policymakers to bench- test competing initiatives based on the statistical evidence. America's presumed exceptionalism is rooted in part on a belief that class-based distinctions are less important than in Western Europe. From this perspective, it is distressing to learn that American children do not have exceptional opportunities to get ahead – and that the consequences of gaps in children's initial circumstances might embed themselves in the social fabric over time, leading to even less social mobility in the future. But there is also some cause for optimism. Programs that compensate at least to some degree for disadvantages earlier in life really can close opportunity gaps and increase rates of social mobility. Moreover, by most any reasonable reckoning, the return on the public investment is high. Editor's note: This piece originally appeared in the Milken Institute Review. Authors Richard V. ReevesIsabel V. Sawhill Publication: Milken Institute Review Image Source: Eric Audras Full Article
til California Utility Opens First Sustainable Campus as Model Utility Site By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 31 Jan 2012 15:44:45 -0500 Burbank Water & Power opens a sustainable power plant campus as a model for re-adapting industrial sites from water reclamation to solar Full Article Design
til Ask Pablo: Why Would My Electric Utility Want Me To Use Less Electricity? By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Feb 2012 06:18:00 -0500 It seems counterintuitive. Is it just greenwashing? Is it due to government regulation? Let's find out. Full Article Energy
til Citing disruptive solar competition, Barclays downgrades utilities By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 29 May 2014 08:56:51 -0400 Environmentalists aren't the only ones considering divestment anymore. Full Article Energy
til British utility allows businesses to buy "local" renewable energy By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 25 Aug 2016 06:09:21 -0400 Should we care where our electrons come from? Full Article Energy
til Utilities are apparently freaking out, and we are all to blame By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 02 Mar 2018 08:40:33 -0500 Efficiency and conservation aren't just about your personal footprint. They're about reaching tipping points. Full Article Energy
til A major U.S. utility company just pledged to go carbon-free for the first time in American history By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 06 Dec 2018 09:00:00 -0500 Are the tables finally starting to turn? Full Article Business
til It's National Handwriting Day. Do you still write by hand? By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 23 Jan 2015 07:00:00 -0500 Some people do; others use a keyboard for everything and have forgotten how. What about you? Full Article Living
til "Hose-to-the-Sky:" Still Spewing SO2 Idea to Stop Global Warming? By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 16:59:48 -0400 Hosed by this theory or greenwashed? Photo by Tony Stl via Flickr On ABC's 20/20 last Friday, Nathan Myhrvold, Microsoft's former chief technology officer, and founder/CEO of Intellectual Ventures (IV), resurrected the idea of stretching a 2-inch Full Article Living
til Ocean Iron Fertilization Could Stimulate Toxic Algae Blooms in Open Ocean By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 08 Nov 2010 17:17:00 -0500 There's no doubt that geoengineering brings out passionate emotions both pro and con, as recent debate on TreeHugger about the sort of-moratorium on some research coming out of the Convention on Biological Diversity Full Article Science
til Message for Policymakers: Ocean Iron Fertilization Chances of Success Low By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 31 Jan 2011 14:55:00 -0500 Another summary of the potential risks and benefits of ocean iron fertilization--the geoengineering method which proposes seeding oceans with iron so as to stimulate microscopic plants that absorb carbon from the Full Article Technology
til A Tale of Two Geoengineering Experiments: Ocean Iron Fertilization & Injecting the Atmosphere By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 18 Jul 2012 17:30:00 -0400 The first field test of injecting sulfate particles into the atmosphere is proposed for New Mexico; ocean iron fertilization experiment shows more promise than previous ones. Full Article Science
til Father told kids can't ride bus to school or go outside alone until age 10 By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Sep 2017 07:00:00 -0400 Yet another bizarre, fact-free, and infuriating ruling has been handed down by British Columbia's Ministry of Children and Family Development. Full Article Living
til One Year Later, TVA Coal Ash Spill Problems Still Far From Over By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 22 Dec 2009 14:42:41 -0500 Sad Anniversary digg_url = 'http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/12/one-year-later-tva-toxic-coal-ash-spill-tennessee.php';A year ago, a massive coal ash spill took place in Tennessee. About 5.4 million cubic yards of ash ended up in a river and Full Article Business
til Do You Still Use The Phone? (Survey) By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 06 Mar 2012 10:14:00 -0500 Dave Roberts and Richard Florida don't like it. Full Article Technology
til 10 Amazing MRI Stills of Fruits and Vegetables By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 08 Oct 2012 05:00:00 -0400 Check out these amazing MRI images of our favorite fruits and vegetables. Full Article Living
til 38 recipes for beans and lentils for superfood meals By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 22 Aug 2013 07:00:00 -0400 Beans and lentils are one of the most important things you can include in your diet. Here are great ideas, from filling breakfasts to sweet and inspired desserts. Full Article Living
til Crunchy-topped lentil casserole [Vegan] By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 07:00:00 -0400 This delicious dish embodies everything comforting about home cooking. Easy, filling, and something everyone at the table will enjoy, whether vegetarian or not. Full Article Living
til Zipcar Stops Renting 2010 Prius Hybrids Until Brake Problems are Fixed By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 10 Feb 2010 12:11:52 -0500 Apologies for the bad Photoshop job... Photo: Zipcar Logo, Toyota Less Than 1% of Zipcar Fleet, But... I'm pretty sure that many TreeHugger readers are also Zipcar customers (car-sharing in general is booming), and chances are that with that crowd, the Full Article Transportation
til How to drink green juice and still be “green” By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 04 Jun 2019 09:00:00 -0400 Green juices and smoothies aren’t necessarily the other kind of green—the eco-friendly kind. Full Article Living
til Wall of Planters Shades And Ventilates House; A New Kind of Living Wall By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 15 Jun 2012 10:10:57 -0400 Here is a great way to keep out the sun and plant a vertical garden Full Article Design
til Built on a tilt: climbable bookshelf is also earthquake resistant By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Dec 2017 15:50:17 -0500 It's wood, it's small, it's resilient. Full Article Design
til How Can Vegetarians Avoid Fish, Blood and Bonemeal Fertilizer? By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 13 Jan 2011 09:01:57 -0500 When I asked whether vegans can eat carrots grown with manure, some commenters found the question despicable. But my intention was not to question anyone's commitment, nor to lessen the Full Article Living
til View From Above: Fertilizer Use Around the World By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 07 Feb 2011 13:18:21 -0500 The map above is the first illustration of worldwide imbalances in the use of phosphorus, a key component of fertilizers and an essential plant nutrient. "Typically, people either worry Full Article Technology
til Radioactive Waste Is Piling Up in Japanese Sewage Treatment Plants, Some Sold as Fertilizer By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Sun, 04 Sep 2011 19:52:17 -0400 The disaster at Fukushima may have faded from the news cycle, but the radioactive waste it left behind isn't going anywhere. At the Saitama sewage treatment plant, 169 miles from Fukushima, workers are dealing with tons of Full Article Business
til Tea Fertilized with Panda Poop Will Cost $36,000 Per Pound and (Maybe) Prevent Cancer By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 14 Nov 2011 18:48:10 -0500 A new tea set to become the world's most expensive is being fertilized with panda feces, and is touted as having cancer-preventing properties. Full Article Living
til Compost tea calculator includes recipes and guides for brewing your own fertilizers By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2015 13:21:31 -0400 Straight outta Humboldt, this app is a great intro to the "art and craft" of brewing your own compost tea for boosting microbial activity in the soil and improving yields. Full Article Living
til From toilet to table: Peecycling research at U of M investigates urine as fertilizer By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2015 16:09:30 -0400 Could human urine be used on a commercial scale to fertilize the food we eat? Full Article Science
til This HORSE converts food waste into fertilizer and energy By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 22 Sep 2015 14:33:30 -0400 In this case, the HORSE is a 'living' machine, not an animal, and has the potential to reinvent the food cycle. Full Article Technology
til Guastavian vaults are still being built, and are as thin and elegant as ever By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Dec 2017 15:06:15 -0500 They are so thin that it's hard to believe that they stand up. Full Article Design
til Big North American banks still banking on extreme fossil fuels By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 28 Mar 2018 15:02:01 -0400 Big risks evidently still promise big rewards. Full Article Energy
til Waterproof solar cell could go through the wash and still work By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 19 Sep 2017 10:43:01 -0400 The solar cell can be stretched, bent and compressed without substantially affecting performance. Full Article Technology
til Shocking! Thousands of Mutilated Shark Fins Drying on Hong Kong Rooftops By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 08 Jan 2013 13:50:33 -0500 Tens of millions of sharks are mutilated and left to die slowly each year so that some affluent people in Asia can each soup. This has to stop. Full Article Science
til Bus stations don't have to be second-rate, as this one in Tilburg demonstrates By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 03 May 2019 15:14:36 -0400 Cepezed Architects design a shelter that is elegant and self-sufficient. Full Article Transportation
til A bike parking facility in Tilburg is even more beautiful than their bus station By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 06 May 2019 08:48:10 -0400 It even has moving sidewalks for bikes. This is how you get people out of cars. Full Article Transportation
til Loyal Canadians still want French's ketchup By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 21 Nov 2017 13:23:00 -0500 Almost two years after a ketchup snub sparked a patriotic backlash in Ontario, sales for French's ketchup remain strong. Full Article Living
til Stair of the Week cantilevers from custom bookcase By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Tue, 18 Aug 2015 13:23:45 -0400 Architect Tamir Addadi squeezes a lot into a very small space Full Article Design
til Energy News Recap: Record Energy Efficiency Investments In 2011, Chevron Still Must Pay $18bn Rainforest Destruction Fine By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Jan 2012 15:16:00 -0500 From record investments in energy investments made by US states, to East Africa's largest wind power project, Chicago's smart gridization, to Chevron's huge fine being upheld, here's what we're reading today. Full Article Energy
til Waste Biomass Charcoal is Solution to Toxic Fertilizers, Says Kickstarter Project (Interview) By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 19 Mar 2012 08:26:20 -0400 Jason Aramburu is trying to revolutionize how we garden by expanding the production of "Black Revolution" biochar, a soil-less growing medium made from farm waste. Full Article Living
til Solar-powered plane stuck in Hawaii until 2016 because of "irreversible" damage to batteries By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 15 Jul 2015 16:46:56 -0400 There are worse places to be stuck than in Hawaii... I'm starting to think they did it on purpose! Full Article Transportation
til On MNN: Robot hotels, over-conditioned offices, seasteading still sinks, and I Kondoed my phone! By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 24 Jul 2015 09:21:28 -0400 A look at some recent posts on our sister site that might interest TreeHuggers. Full Article Living
til Over 1,000 mutilated dolphins have washed up on French coast By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 01 Apr 2019 08:54:00 -0400 The gruesome deaths raise serious questions about the practices of fishing trawlers. Full Article Science
til Centuries-Old State of the Art Still Useful Today By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Jun 2010 15:19:10 -0400 Outside the southeastern Turkish city of Mardin lie the 6th-century ruins of the Roman settlement of Dara, Full Article Living
til Photographer documents India's forgotten yet still remarkable water stepwells By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 09 Sep 2015 07:00:00 -0400 These impressive feats of architecture and engineering are one of India's traditional methods of water conservation. Now threatened by disuse and a growing water crisis, one photojournalist is documenting them before they are forgotten. Full Article Living
til The Shakers' Design Sense is Still an Influence in America By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 20 Jul 2012 05:00:00 -0400 The Shakers may be long gone but their simplicity of design still has an influence on American furniture. Full Article Design
til Leaf blowers are still a scourge of humanity By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Mon, 07 Nov 2016 14:13:04 -0500 Is it time to ban these useless and unnecessary noise and pollution machines? Full Article Living
til Still lots of life in the Green Living Show By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Apr 2018 17:09:09 -0400 Could it be that green living is making a comeback? Full Article Living
til CA approves utilities' massive $738 million electric vehicle proposal By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Jun 2018 10:19:37 -0400 This will mark a significant scaling of electrified transportation—including trucks and buses too. Full Article Transportation
til California utility offers rebates and incentives for going all-electric By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 28 Jun 2018 16:20:54 -0400 SMUD demonstrate that all-electric living is actually cheaper than gas. Full Article Energy