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  • Conference attendees review the conference schedule in a conference program. Credit: istock.com/SDI Productions

    CPC-CG at the British Society for Population Studies annual conference

    CPC-CG members will head to the British Society for Population Studies (BSPS) annual conference at the University of Bath from 9-11 September 2024.

    CPC-CG are one of the sponsors of this year's conference. The programme is packed with sessions from across the breadth of population studies, workshops, training sessions, and opportunities to meet people. This year Heidi Colleran is speaking in plenary on 'Deconstructing natural fertility', and our Connecting Generations Strategic Advisory Board Chair Sir Ian Diamond is in conversation with Alice Reid. A further plenary will given by the winner of this year's Anne Shepherd New Investigator Award, Alina Pelikh, on 'Changing life course trajectories of young people in England and Wales during the transition to adulthood'.

    On the second day, CPC members from the UK Generations and Gender Survey team will be delivering a training session on using the UK GGS survey data. CPC-CG will also have a stand at the conference so do pay us a visit to find out more about our work and pick-up some conference stationery essentials.

    You can find out about our members' presentations below with links to their abstracts. For the latest conference updates, follow us on Twitter, along with @bspsUK and the hashtag #bsps2024. More information and a full conference programme are available on the BSPS website.

    Monday 9 September

    13:30-15:00


    The uncertainty of forced displacement: How language and violence have shaped forced migrants’ journeys during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
    Brienna Perelli-Harris, Orsola Torrisi
    Session: Disaster and crisis 1
    Location: CB3.16

    Projecting migrant family life-courses in Britain
    Andrew Ibbetson, Hill Kulu, Julia Mikolai
    Session: Migration 1: Patterns and trends
    Location: CB3.5

    16:45-18:15

    Ethnic differences in pension protection in the UK: continuity and change between 2009-2023
    Athina Vlachantoni, Yuanyuan Yin, Saddaf Naaz Akhtar, Spela Mocnik
    Session: Ageing 2 – Employment in later life
    Location: CB3.1

    Competing demands for informal care provision: An intersectional multilevel analysis of individual heterogeneity and discriminatory accuracy (IMAIDHA)
    Edward Pomeroy, Francesca Fiori
    Session: Ageing 2 – Employment in later life
    Location: CB3.1

    Do flexible hours and working from home allow parents to more equally share childcare tasks
    Bernice Kuang, Brienna Perelli-Harris, Ann Berrington
    Session: Families and households 2: Economic and social implications of the division of housework
    Location: CB1.10

    Tuesday 10 September

    09:00-10:30


    Chair: Hill Kulu
    Session: Longitudinal census data
    Location: CB3.1

    13:30-15:00

    Precarity, class, and parental coresidence in the UK: Evidence amidst the cost-of-living crisis
    Vincent Jerald Ramos, Ann Berrington
    Session: Families and households 4: Transition to adulthood
    Location: CB1.10

    15:15-16:45

    Chair: Jakub Bijak
    Session: Data science 1: Data, methods, and models
    Location: CB3.9

    Developing joint Bayesian projections of male and female fertility
    Joanne Ellison, Jason Hilton, Jakub Bijak, Erengul Dodd, Jonathan J Forster, Peter W F Smith
    Session: Data science 1: Data, methods, and models
    Location: CB3.9

    Chair: Mary Abed Al Ahad
    Session: Migration 3: Migration, gender and ethnicity
    Location: CB3.5

    Residential mobility of immigrants and their descendants in England and Wales
    Parth Pandya, Hill Kulu, Chia Liu, Julia Mikolai
    Session: Migration 3: Migration, gender and ethnicity
    Location: CB3.5

    Training session – Introducing the Generations and Gender Survey in the UK (UK GGS)
    Location: CB3.1
    Introduction to the Generations and Gender Survey in the UK - Brienna Perelli-Harris
    Using the GGS Partnership and Fertility histories - Bernice Kuang
    Online methodological insights from the UK GGS - Olga Maslovskaya
    Accessing and using the international GGS - Olga Grunwald

    18:15-19:15

    Migrant mortality advantage in two different welfare contexts: A comparison of England & Wales and Norway
    Joseph Harrison, Frank Sullivan, Katherine Keenan, Hill Kulu
    Session: Health and mortality among selected populations
    Location: CB3.9

    Wednesday 11 September

    09:00-10:30


    Chair: Bernice Kuang
    Session: Families and households 5: Family policies
    Location: CB1.10

    Designing a survey instrument to evaluate people’s perceptions of family policies to support fertility in Scotland
    Francesca Fiori, Daniele Vignoli, Raffaele Guetto
    Session: Families and households 5: Family policies
    Location: CB1.10

    Unmet care needs over time: Social networks and persistent unmet needs
    Athina Vlachantoni, Maria Evandrou, Jane Falkingham, Min Qin
    Session: Ageing 3: Health & care in later life
    Location: CB3.1

    11:00-12:30

    Residential mobility and housing tenure changes among immigrants and their descendants: A crossnational analysis of five European countries
    Isaure Delaporte, Hill Kulu, Julia Mikolai, Chia Liu et al
    Session: Migration 4: Immigration, health, neighbourhoods, housing, and family
    Location: CB3.9

    Heterogeneities in family formation across generations and origin of descendants of immigrants in Sweden: Which comes first, homeownership, marriage, or childbirth?
    Mary Abed Al Ahad, Gunnar Andersson, Hill Kulu
    Session: Migration 4: Immigration, health, neighbourhoods, housing, and family
    Location: CB3.9

    Diverse life course trajectories: A comparison of the life course trajectories of migrants and their descendants in the UK
    Sarah Christison, Júlia Mikolai, Hill Kulu
    Session: Migration 4: Immigration, health, neighbourhoods, housing, and family
    Location: CB3.9



    Posted 05/09/2024 09:51

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