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R.S. Oropesa
R.S. Oropesa
Professor Emeritus of Sociology & Demography, The Pennsylvania State University
Verified email at psu.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Neighborhood context and residential mobility
BA Lee, RS Oropesa, JW Kanan
Demography 31 (2), 249-270, 1994
5521994
Hispanic families in the United States: Family structure and process in an era of family change
NS Landale, RS Oropesa, C Bradatan
Hispanics and the future of America 5, 1-30, 2006
3062006
Hispanic families: Stability and change
NS Landale, RS Oropesa
Annu. Rev. Sociol. 33, 381-405, 2007
2962007
Migration and Infant Death: Assimilation or Selective Migration Among Puerto Ricans?
NS Landale, RS Oropesa, BK Gorman
American Sociological Review 65 (6), 888-909, 2000
2742000
Normative beliefs about marriage and cohabitation: A comparison of non-Latino Whites, Mexican Americans, and Puerto Ricans
RS Oropesa
Journal of Marriage and the Family, 49-62, 1996
2581996
White, black, or Puerto Rican? Racial self-identification among mainland and island Puerto Ricans
NS Landale, RS Oropesa
Social Forces 81 (1), 231-254, 2002
2522002
The future of marriage and Hispanics
RS Oropesa, NS Landale
Journal of Marriage and family 66 (4), 901-920, 2004
2222004
In search of the new second generation: Alternative strategies for identifying second generation children and understanding their acquisition of English
RS Oropesa, NS Landale
Sociological perspectives 40 (3), 429-455, 1997
1911997
Development and marital power in Mexico
RS Oropesa
Social Forces 75 (4), 1291-1318, 1997
1721997
Does Americanization have adverse effects on health?: stress, health habits, and infant health outcomes among Puerto Ricans
NS Landale, RS Oropesa, D Llanes, BK Gorman
Social Forces 78 (2), 613-641, 1999
1661999
Marriage markets and the paradox of Mexican American nuptiality
RS Oropesa, DT Lichter, RN Anderson
Journal of Marriage and the Family, 889-907, 1994
1641994
Father involvement in the lives of mainland Puerto Rican children: Contributions of nonresident, cohabiting and married fathers
NS Landale, RS Oropesa
Social Forces 79 (3), 945-968, 2001
1582001
Using the service economy to relieve the double burden: Female labor force participation and service purchases
RS Oropesa
Journal of Family Issues 14 (3), 438-473, 1993
1381993
Immigrant legacies: Ethnicity, generation, and children's familial and economic lives
RS Oropesa, NS Landale
Social Science Quarterly, 399-416, 1997
130*1997
Behavioral functioning among Mexican-origin children: does parental legal status matter?
NS Landale, JH Hardie, RS Oropesa, MM Hillemeier
Journal of health and social behavior 56 (1), 2-18, 2015
1262015
Migration, social support and perinatal health: An origin-destination analysis of Puerto Rican women
NS Landale, RS Oropesa
Journal of health and social Behavior, 166-183, 2001
1192001
Schooling, work, and idleness among Mexican and non-Latino white adolescents
NS Landale, RS Oropesa, D Llanes
Social Science Research 27 (4), 457-480, 1998
1191998
Immigrant children and the children of immigrants: Inter-and intra-ethnic group differences in the United States
N Landale, RS Oropesa
Population Research Group, 1995
1171995
Immigration and infant health: Birth outcomes of immigrant and native-born women
NS Landale, RS Oropesa, BK Gorman
Children of immigrants: Health, adjustment and public assistance, 244-285, 1999
1111999
Testing the decline-of-community thesis: Neighborhood organizations in Seattle, 1929 and 1979
BA Lee, RS Oropesa, BJ Metch, AM Guest
American Journal of Sociology 89 (5), 1161-1188, 1984
1061984
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