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Appendix
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF PANEL MEMBERS AND STAFF
BURTON SINGER, chair of the Panel on Indignation Statistics, is professor
and chair of the Department of Statistics at Columbia University and
adjunct professor, Laboratory of Populations at Rockefeller University.
He also is a member of the Committee on National Statistics. He received
a Ph.D. in statistics from Stanford University. His interests include
medical epidemiology, economics, demography, and the theory of stochastic
processes.
SAM BERNSEN is a practicing immigration attorney in Washington, D.C.,
with the firm of Fragomen, Del Rey & Bernsen, P.C. He also teaches
immigration law at the law schools of American University and Catholic
University. From 1974 to 1977 he served as general counsel of the
Immigration and Naturalization Service. Previously he served in that
agency as an assistant commissioner and as a district director. He has
an LL.B. from Brooklyn Law School.
GEORGE J. BORJAS is professor of
California, Santa Barbara; he is also
National Bureau of Economic Research.
extent of quality changes among the
United States in the postwar period.
mathematics from St. Peter's College
Columbia University.
economics at the University of
a research associate at the
His present work examines the
immigrant cohorts admitted to the
He received a B.S. in economics and
and a Ph.D. in economics from
NORMAN L. CHERVANY is a professor of management sciences and director of
professional management programs in the Graduate School of Management at
the University of Minnesota. His major work is in the area of applied
decision-information systems and in organizational strategy. He is past
president and a fellow of the American Institute for Decision Sciences.
He has a B.S. in mathematics from Mount Union College and M.B.A. and
D.B.A. degrees in quantitative business analysis from Indiana University.
KENNETH HILL, associate study director for the Panel on Immigration
Statistics, has been on the staff of the Commission on Behavioral and
Social Sciences and Education of the National Research Council since
1977. His previous work experience has been mainly in the field of
demographic statistics for developing countries, working for the
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326
Statistics Division of the government of Uganda, the Centre for
Population Studies of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine,
the U. N. Lat in American Demographic Centre, and the Committee on
Populat ion and Demography of the Nat tonal Research Counc il. He has a
Ph.D. from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He has
authored or coauthored numerous art icles and texts concerning the
estimation of fertility, mortality and migration for developing countries.
CHARLES B. KEELY is senior associate at the Populat ion Counc it in New
York. He received a Ph.D. in sociology from Fordham University. His
research interests include labor migration, especially in the Middle
East, international policy and programs on refugees, and U.S. immigration
policy and its demographic impacts.
ELLEN PERCY KRALY is assistant professor of geography at Colgate
University. She received an M.S. degree in demography from Johns Hopkins
University and a Ph.D. in sociology from Fordham University. Her
research focuses on federal and international statistics on immigration
and emigration, the relationship between immigration and population
growth, and trends in emigration from the United States. She is also
directing a research project involving issues in infant nutrition.
DANIEL B. LEVINE, study director for the Panel on Immigration Statistics,
was formerly with the Bureau of the Census; he was deputy director
between 1979 and 1982 and also served as acting director. His interests
are in the management of statistical systems and in the collection,
processing, and presentation of statistical information, particularly
through the conduct of large-scale surveys and censuses. He is a fellow
of the American Statistical Association and a member of the International
Statistical Institute. He received an M.A. in economics from Columbia
University.
MILTON D. MORRIS is director of research at the Joint Center for
Political Studies. Previously he was associate professor of political
science at Southern Illinois University, a research fellow at the Joint
Center, and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. His research
interests are in political behavior, race and ethnic relations,
immigration, and urban policy. He received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in
political science from the University of Maryland.
ALE JANDRO FORTES is professor of sociology at the Johns Hopkins
University and a member of the faculty of the Hopkins School of Advanced
International Studies in Washington. Previously he taught at Duke
University, the University of Brasilia, the University of Texas at
Austin, and the University of Illinois. He has served as chair of the
Latin American and Caribbean Dissertation Fellowship Committee of the
Social Science Research Council, program adviser for social sciences for
the Ford Foundation in Brazil, and associate director of the Institute of
Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin. His principal
research interests are comparative urbanization and international
migration. He is currently conducting a longitudinal study of 1980 Cuban
(Marie!) refugees and Haitian boat people in South Florida and a
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327
comparative project on the urban informal sector in two South American
capital cities.
JACK ROSENTHAL is deputy editorial page editor of The New York Times. He
graduated from Harvard College, served as a senior aide in the Department
of Justice and the Department of State, spent a year at Harvard's
Institute of Politics as a fellow, served as principal author of the
Kerner Commission report on urban disorders, and won the Pulitzer Prize
for editorial writing in 1982. He has written about immigration since
college, inside and outside the government. He is an immigrant.
MARK R. ROSENZWEIG is professor of economics at the University of
Minnesota. He received a Ph.D. in economics from Columbia University.
During 1979-1980 he was a research director of the Select Commission on
Immigration and Refugee Policy. He is currently working on a monograph
on U.S. immigration using Census Bureau, INS, and World Bank data and on
studies of the determinants and consequences of child health, fertility,
family structure, and public health programs in developed and developing
countries.
TERESA A. SULLIVAN is associate professor of sociology and training
director of the Population Research Center at the University of Texas at
Austin. She received a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of
Chicago. She is a demographer with interests in labor force,
immigration, and minority groups. She is also a member of the National
Research Council's Panel on Technology and Women's Employment.
MARTA TIENDA is professor of rural sociology and affiliate of the Center
for Demography and Ecology and the Institute for Research on Poverty at
the University of Wisconsin. She is principal investigator of a research
project on the labor market and program participation of Hispanic
immigrants and Southeast Asian refugees. Her expertise is in economic
sociology, demography, international development and immigration. She is
a member of the board of directors of the Population Association of
America and the Census Advisory Committee on Population Statistics
(1979-1985~. She received a B.A. in Spanish literature from Michigan
State University and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in sociology from the
University of Texas at Austin.
JAMES TRUSSELL is professor of economics and public affairs and faculty
associate in the Office of Population Research at Princeton University.
His principal research interests are demographic methods, fertility, and
family planning, and he has published research papers in all three
areas. He is a member of the Population Association of America and the
International Union for the Scientific Study of Population. He received
a B.S. in mathematics from Davidson College, a B.Phil. from Oxford
University in economics, and a Ph.D. in economics from Princeton
University.
KENNETH W. WACHTER is associate professor of demography and statistics at
the University of California, Berkeley. Author of a major work on
statistical studies of historical social structure, he also works in the
areas of multivariate statistical analysis, mathematical population
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studies, demographic simulation, and kinship forecasting. An expert
witness in the suit over the 1980 U.S. census, he serves as a member of
the National Science Foundation's Review Panel on Measurement Methods and
Data Improvement, as a member of the Scientific Committee on Family and
Life Cycle Demography of the International Union for the Scientific Study
of Population, and as research associate of the National Bureau for
Economic Research. He has a Ph.D. in statistics from Cambridge
University.
ROBERT WARREN, who served as research associate for the study, is now a
demographer with the Statistical Analysis Branch of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service. At the time of the study, he was on leave to the
panel from the Bureau of the Census. His research interests have focused
on the evaluation of decennial census coverage and the development of
methodology to estimate emigration and undocumented immigration. He is
the coauthor of a pathfinding report on estimating the number of illegal
aliens counted in the 1980 decennial census. He has an M.S. from Indiana
University.
Representative terms from entire chapter:
population association