September 2015 Name: Linda G. Martin

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September 2015
CURRICULUM VITAE
Name:
Linda G. Martin
Contact Information:
RAND Corporation
1200 South Hayes Street
Arlington, VA 22202-5050 USA
lmartin@rand.org
DEGREES AND OTHER EDUCATION
Department of Economics, Princeton University, Ph.D., 1978.
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, M.P.A.,
1972.
Radcliffe College, Harvard University, B.A., cum laude general studies, 1970 (major:
mathematics).
Nathan Hale High School, Tulsa, Oklahoma, 1966.
Language training, but by no means fluency, in French, Spanish, and Japanese.
HONORS
American Association for the Advancement of Science, elected fellow, 2009.
Pardee RAND Graduate School, Doctor of Public Policy (honorary), 2006.
Marlboro College, Doctor of Humane Letters (honorary), 2002.
EMPLOYMENT
September 2007
to present
Senior Fellow (adjunct), RAND Corporation. Advising on a variety of
RAND studies and activities, as well as conducting own research on health
of older people in the United States, Asia, and Europe.
September 2007
to June 2009
Adjunct Professor, Department of Population, Family and
Reproductive Health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns
Hopkins University.
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September 2004
to August 2007
Scholar-in-Residence, Institute of Medicine, National Academy of
Sciences. Advising on a variety of IOM studies and activities, as well as
conducting own research on health of older people in the U.S. and Asia.
February 1999
to July 2004
President, Population Council. Headquartered in New York and with
19 offices in Washington, Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle
East, the council is a nonprofit research organization that was founded in
1952. Its staff of 600 does social science, health services, and biomedical
research to improve the well-being and reproductive health of current and
future generations. In 2003, total expenditures were $73 million of which
a third focused on HIV/AIDS.
December 1995
to January 1999
Vice President for Research Development, RAND. Responsible for
fundraising, media relations, corporate publications, U.S. Congressional
relations, and celebration of RAND's 50th anniversary in 1998. RAND is
a non-profit, non-partisan policy research organization with annual
expenditures in 1998 of over $100 million that focused on national
security and social policy issues.
June 1993
to December 1995
Vice President and Director, Domestic Research Division, RAND.
Responsible for approximately 200 professional staff and annual
expenditures of $30 million for research in the United States and abroad
organized into six programs: health, education and training, labor and
population, criminal justice, civil justice, and environment.
August 1989
to June 1993
Director, Committee on Population, National Research Council,
National Academy of Sciences. Responsible for the organization,
funding, and publications of 45 scholars and policymakers from around the
world who served as volunteers on the committee, its Africa panel and six
working groups, and other ad hoc groups. Studies and activities focused
on domestic and international topics, such as population change in Africa,
accessibility of family planning services, adolescent fertility, child
mortality, the epidemiological transition, AIDS, families and development,
and land use. The committee staff received the 1993 NRC Group
Recognition Award for its Africa work.
February 1979
to August 1989
Research Associate, East-West Population Institute, East-West
Center. The East-West Center is a non-profit organization established by
the U.S. Congress to address issues facing Asia, the Pacific, and the
United States through collaborative research, training, and exchanges.
Projects worked on are reflected in the list of publications below.
February 1979
Assistant, Associate, to Full Professor of Economics, University of
2
to August 1989
Hawaii. Taught courses on the economics of population at the
undergraduate and graduate levels. Served as member or chair of 24
dissertation committees in economics, sociology, and public health, and
advisor to numerous undergraduate and graduate students and East-West
Center grantees.
July 1982
to October 1984
Assistant Director for Professional Education, East-West Population
Institute, East-West Center. Organized annual five-week summer
seminar program for Asian and U.S. researchers and policymakers in
Honolulu and an Asian site, plus the ASEAN parliamentarians seminar on
population and development.
December 1977
to January 1979
Research Associate to Research Director, U.S. House of
Representatives, Select Committee on Population. Organized hearings,
assisted members, and wrote a report on domestic population issues.
September 1972
to May 1974
Director, Management Information Senior Centers, Bureau of
Purchased Social Services for Adults, Human Resources
Administration, City of New York. Designed and implemented a
management information system for approximately 100 senior citizen
centers opened by community groups throughout the city from 1972 to
1974 with local, state, and federal funds.
May to August 1971 Assistant to the Research and Evaluation Officer, U.S. Agency for
International Development, New Delhi, India. Assisted in the
evaluation of various population and family planning initiatives.
OTHER TEACHING AND RESEARCH APPOINTMENTS
Course on population issues and public policy co-taught at the RAND Graduate School for Ph.D.
candidates in policy analysis (1996, 1998).
Member, Policy Advisory Committee, Clinical Scholars Program, UCLA School of Medicine
(1995-97).
Member, dissertation committees in sociology, Princeton University (1990-91) and University of
Michigan (1992-95).
Senior research scholar (adjunct appointment), Department of Demography, Georgetown
University (Sept. 1989-June 1993).
Fulbright faculty research grant in economics, Japan (Sept.-Dec. 1988).
Visiting research fellow, Nihon University, Tokyo (1980, 1981, 1983).
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PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Chair-Elect (2006), Chair (2007), Retiring Chair (2008), Section on Social, Economic, and
Political Sciences (elected).
Delegate (elected), Council (2003-06).
Member (elected), Committee on Council Affairs (2003-05).
National Institutes of Health
Member, Administrative Review of Behavioral and Social Research Demography Centers,
National Institute on Aging (2003 and 2007).
Chair, Working Group on Modular Grants, Office of the Director (2001).
Member, Working Group on Regulatory Burden, Office of the Director (2000-01).
Consultant, review of centers concept, Demographic and Behavioral Sciences Branch, Center for
Population Research, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (1999).
Member, Peer Review Oversight Group, Office of the Director (1998-2004).
Member, virtual committee to review the report of the Committee on Rating of Grant
Applications, organized by Deputy Director for Extramural Research (1996).
Member, Reviewers Reserve (1995-99).
Participant, Reinvention Roundtable on Peer Review, Office of the Director (1994).
Member, Neuroscience, Behavior, and Sociology of Aging Review Committee, National Institute
on Aging (1991-95).
Member/chair of ad hoc peer review panels (1984, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 2000, 2001, 2002,
2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2010); outside reviewer (1988, 1990, 1996, 1997).
National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences
Member, Steering Committee, New Survey Measures of Cognitive and Functional Disability,
Committee on National Statistics (2008-09).
Member, Panel on a Research Agenda and New Data for an Aging World, Committee on
Population (1999-2001).
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Co-chair, planning meeting to consider the establishment of a board on aging, jointly with the
Institute of Medicine (1997).
Member, Committee on Population (1993-1999).
Chair, Panel on Aging in Developing Countries, Board on Science and Technology for
International Development (1987).
Population Association of America
Member (appointed), Irene B. Taeuber Award Committee (2013-15).
Co-chair, Search Committee for Executive Director (2013-14).
Chair, Ad Hoc Committee on Leadership Task Structure (2013).
Vice President-elect (2011), Vice President (2012).
Member (elected, 2008-2010), chair (2010), Publications Committee.
Member (elected), Board of Directors (1991-93).
Member (appointed), Robert J. Lapham Award Committee (1989-1993).
Annual meeting:
Program committee co-chair (2011-12).
Program committee member (2007-08, 2008-09).
Topic co-organizer for all sessions on aging (1994).
Organizer/chair for sessions on policies other than family planning to affect fertility
(1987); aging in developing countries (1990); demography of sub-Saharan Africa (1993);
living arrangements of the elderly (1995); consequences of immigration for receiving
countries (1997); demographic, labor, and fiscal effects of immigration (1998);
demography of disability (1999); health of U.S. elderly (2001); aging in developing
countries (2009, 2010).
Discussant for sessions on intergenerational transfers and the family (1990); bargaining
and decision making in the family (1993); aging and retirement in Taiwan (1995); the
National Health and Aging Trends Survey (2013).
Paper author on a variety of topics (1978, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988,
1989, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011,
2013, 2014).
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Other
Member, Scientific Advisory Panel, National Health and Aging Trends Study (supported by the
U.S. National Institute on Aging and led by Johns Hopkins University; 2009- ).
Member, TRENDS (network to evaluate trends in old-age disability, supported by the U.S.
National Institute on Aging and led by the University of Michigan; 2005- ).
Member, Advisory Council, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs,
Princeton University (2000-08).
Member, Faculty Scholars Selection Committee, William T. Grant Foundation (2000-02).
Member, National Advisory Committee, Decade of Behavior (1999-2002).
Member, Council of the National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging, Inter-University
Consortium for Political and Social Research, University of Michigan (1995-98).
Member, Technical Evaluation Panel on Aging in Developing Countries, U.S. Bureau of the
Census (1990-1993).
Member, Ad Hoc Long Term Care Financing Technical Advisory Committee, Executive Office
on Aging, Office of the Governor, State of Hawaii (1988).
Team leader for a consultancy through the International Science and Technology Institute with
the U.S. Agency for International Development, Bangladesh, to evaluate female education and
employment initiatives to reduce fertility (1985).
Editorial board member, Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology (1992- ).
Editor, Asian and Pacific Population Forum, a quarterly publication of the East-West Population
Institute distributed to 2,000 policymakers, professionals, and scholars throughout the region
(1987-1989).
RESEARCH GRANTS
Co-investigator, R21 grant from the National Institute on Aging to Zachary Zimmer, University
of Utah, on modeling disability trajectories in rapidly aging populations (2010-2014).
Co-investigator, R01 grant from the National Institute on Aging to Vicki A. Freedman,
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, on disparities in and explanations of trends
in late-life health in the United States (2003-2008).
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Co-investigator, R01 grant from the National Institute on Aging to Zachary Zimmer, Population
Council, on analysis of health transitions in Taiwan, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Singapore
(2001-2005).
Co-investigator, R03 grant from the National Institute on Aging to Vicki A. Freedman, RAND,
on explaining trends in functioning of older Americans (1998-2001).
Principal investigator, grant to the Committee on Population of the National Research Council
(NRC) from the National Institute on Aging (via the National Science Foundation and the
Committee on National Statistics) for activities related to the demography of aging (1992-1993).
Principal investigator, cooperative agreement between the NRC and the Office of Population,
Agency for International Development for research on the population dynamics of Sub-Saharan
Africa and population issues in developing countries (1990-1993).
Principal investigator, cooperative agreement between the NRC and the Office of Health, Agency
for International Development for activities related to the use of demographic data for health care
planning in developing countries (1990-1993).
Principal investigator, grant to the NRC from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation for research on
population issues in developing countries (1990-1993).
Principal investigator, grant to the NRC from the Rockefeller Foundation for research on the
population dynamics of Sub-Saharan Africa (1990-1992).
Principal investigator, grants to the NRC from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation for
research on population issues in developing countries (1989-1991; 1991-1993).
Principal investigator, host-country contract with the National Family Planning Coordinating
Board of Indonesia (BKKBN), funded by U.S. Agency for International Development, to assist
BKKBN in the establishment of an international family planning training center (1988-1989).
Principal investigator, Asian Family Survey Project, a collaborative project in Japan, Korea,
Thailand, and the United States with funding from the East-West Center and Nihon University
(1986-1989).
Co-principal investigator with Robert Evenson (Yale University) and James Roumasset
(University of Hawaii), survey and analysis of rural labor markets and fertility in Laguna,
Philippines, funded by the Population Council (1984-1986).
SELECTED PRESENTATIONS AND CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION
Presenter, technical meeting on post-2015 health outcome measures, World Health Organization,
Geneva, Switzerland (2014).
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Presenter, P.K. Whelpton Memorial Lecture, Scripps Gerontology Center, Miami University,
Oxford, Ohio (2014).
Presenter, George Myers Memorial Lecture, 25th meeting of the REVES Network on Health
Expectancy, Austin, Texas (2013).
Speaker, Minnesota Population Center Seminar Series, University of Minnesota (2013).
Speaker, Workshop on Compression of Morbidity, Center for Population and Development
Studies, Harvard University (2012).
Speaker, Interagency Conference on Aging with Disability, Department of Education and
Department of Health and Human Services (2012).
Speaker, invited session on the Baby Boomers turn 65, annual meeting of the Population
Association of America (2011)
Speaker, roundtable on disability implications of an aging workforce, Department of Labor,
sponsored by Rutgers University (2010).
Paper presenter, 22nd meeting of the REVES Network on Health Expectancy, Havana, Cuba
(2010).
Speaker, Pacific Forum on Elderly Care in Building a Harmonious Society, Shanghai, China
(2009).
Speaker, invited session on what next for the demography of aging, annual meeting of the
Population Association of America 2008).
Speaker, disability seminar series, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (2007).
Speaker, symposium highlighting work of junior-faculty member Scott Lynch, Sociology
Department, Princeton University (2006).
Speaker, seminar on health of older Americans, Center for Population and Health, Georgetown
University (2005).
Speaker, Board on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Institute of Medicine (2004).
Speaker, working group on disability, National Bureau of Economic Research (2004).
Speaker, conference on older adult health, Massachusetts Institute of Technology AgeLab (2004).
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Speaker, What Works in the Fight Against HIV/AIDS in Africa, Capitol Hill (2003).
Speaker, International Union for the Scientific Study of Population Conference on Longevity,
Rockefeller University (2003).
Commencement speaker, Marlboro College, Vermont (2002).
Speaker, inaugural annual lecture of the Centre on Population Ageing, Oxford University (2001).
Speaker, seminar on trends in functioning of older adults, Research School of Social Sciences,
Australian National University, Canberra (2000).
Panelist, joint conference on healthy aging, Ministry of Health and Social Affairs, Sweden, and
the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Stockholm (2000).
Panelist, symposium in honor of Professor Albert I. Hermalin, Population Studies Center,
University of Michigan (2000).
Panel chair and speaker, session on aging and functioning, annual meeting of the Institute of
Medicine, National Academy of Sciences (1999).
Speaker, briefing on “Our World at Six Billion,” sponsored by the Population Resource Center,
Population Council, and Population Reference Bureau in cooperation with the Congressional
Coalition on Population and Development, Washington (1999).
Keynote speaker, World Population Day Symposium, organized by the Japanese Organization for
International Cooperation in Family Planning, Council on Population Education, and Family
Planning Federation of Japan, Tokyo (1999).
Panelist, Conference to Promote US-Japan NGO Networks in Population and Development,
Population Reference Bureau (1995).
Participant, National Academy of Sciences' sixth annual Symposium on Frontiers of Science for
outstanding young scientists (1994).
Speaker, Congressional Breakfast Program for the U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging and
Senate staff (1993).
Panelist, Critical Trends in Population, Resources and Environment in Asia: The American
Stake, East-West Center Seminar Program, Washington, D.C. (1993).
Speaker, World Affairs Council of Washington, D.C. (1993).
Plenary speaker, Conference on the Changing Face of Informal Caregiving for the Elderly,
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sponsored by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (1992).
Guest lecturer, Advanced Management Program, Wharton School of the University of
Pennsylvania (1992).
Speaker, Faculty/Alumni Seminar on U.S. Competitiveness and Relations with Japan, Woodrow
Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University (1992).
Speaker, seminars at the University of Maryland, Duke University, North Carolina State
University, University of Texas, University of Michigan, RAND, U.S. Bureau of the Census,
Johns Hopkins University, and Pennsylvania State University (1991); University of Michigan
and RAND (1992); University of Pennsylvania (1993); Australian National University (2000).
Speaker, International Forum: Asian Seminar, Kyoto, Japan, organized by the Wharton School
of the University of Pennsylvania (1990).
Speaker, Regional Assembly of the American Assembly on U.S. Policy Toward World
Population Growth, Humphrey Institute, University of Minnesota (1989).
Keynote speaker, Workshop on Cross-Cultural Research Strategies in the Developing World,
XIVth International Congress of Gerontology, Acapulco (1989).
Speaker, Frank W. Notestein Lecture Series, Office of Population Research, Princeton University
(1989).
Panel member, Conference on the Aging Agenda for the 21st Century, Executive Office on
Aging, Office of the Governor, State of Hawaii (1988).
Participant, Workshop on the Demography of Aging, Committee on Population, National
Research Council, National Academy of Sciences (1988).
Panel member, Conference on the United States and Asia, Pomona College (1986).
Faculty member, Princeton University Alumni College on the U.S. and the Pacific Basin (1986).
BOOKS AND MONOGRAPHS
Marilyn J. Field, Alan M. Jette, and ______, eds. 2006. Workshop on Disability in America: A
New Look. National Academies Press, 275 pp.
Vicki A. Freedman, ______, and Robert F. Schoeni. 2004. Disability in America. Population
Bulletin 59 (3), Population Reference Bureau, 32 pp.
10
_____ and Beth J. Soldo, eds. 1997. Racial and Ethnic Differences in the Health of Older
Americans. National Academy Press, 300 pp.
_____ and Samuel H. Preston, eds. 1994. Demography of Aging. National Academy Press,
411 pp.
Karen A. Foote, Kenneth H. Hill, and _____, eds. 1993. Demographic Change in Sub-Saharan
Africa. National Academy Press, 379 pp. (Also published as Changements Demographiques en
Afrique Subsaharienne by Presses Universitaires de France, 1996.)
Working Group on Demographic Effects of Economic and Social Reversals, Panel on the
Population Dynamics of Sub-Saharan Africa. 1993. Demographic Effects of Economic
Reversals in Sub-Saharan Africa. National Academy Press, 193 pp. (drafted 3 of the 7 chapters
and served as principal editor).
Karen A. Foote and _____, eds.,1993. Family and Development. National Academy Press,
53 pp.
_____. 1989. The graying of Japan. Population Bulletin 44(2), Population Reference Bureau,
42 pp.
_____, ed. 1987. The ASEAN Success Story: Social, Economic, and Political Dimensions.
University of Hawaii Press, 253 pp.
_____, Donna R. Flanagan, and Ana R. Klenicki. 1985. Evaluation of the Bangladesh Female
Secondary Education Scholarship Program and Related Female Education and Employment
Initiatives to Reduce Fertility, a report produced by the International Science and Technology
Institute for the Office of Population, U.S. Agency for International Development, 117 pp.
Anne D. Williams and _____, 1978. Domestic Consequences of United States Population
Change. U.S. House of Representatives Select Committee on Population, 132 pp.
ARTICLES AND PAPERS
_______, Zachary Zimmer, and Jinkook Lee. 2015. Foundations of activity of daily living
trajectories of older Americans. Journals of Gerontology: Social Sciences.
doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbv074
_______, Qiushi Feng, Yi Zeng, and Robert F. Schoeni. 2014. Trends in function and activity
limitations among Chinese oldest-old, 1998 to 2008. Population and Development Review
40(3):475-495.
Zachary Zimmer, _______, Bobby L. Jones, and Daniel S. Nagin. 2014. Examining late-life
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functional limitation trajectories and their associations with underlying onset, recovery, and
mortality. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences 69(2):275-286.
_______ and Robert F. Schoeni. 2014. Trends in disability and related chronic conditions among
the forty-and-over population: 1997-2010. Disability and Health Journal 7:S4-S14. An earlier
version was presented at a May 17-18, 2012, interagency conference, sponsored by the
Administration for Community Living (DHHS), National Institute on Aging (NIH/DHHS),
National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (Dept. of Educ.), and the Interagency
Committee on Disability Research.
Vicki A. Freedman, Brenda C. Spillman, Patti M. Andreski, Jennifer C. Cornman, Eileen M.
Crimmins, Ellen Kramarow, James Lubitz, _______, Sharon S. Merkin, Robert F. Schoeni,
Teresa E. Seeman, and Timothy A. Waidmann. 2013. Trends in late-life activity limitations in
the United States: An update from five national surveys. Demography 50 (2):661-671.
_______, Robert F. Schoeni, Patricia M. Andreski, and Carol Jagger. 2012. Trends and
inequalities in late-life health and functioning in England. Journal of Epidemiology and
Community Health 66:874-880.
Zachary Zimmer, ______, Daniel S. Nagin, and Bobby L. Jones. 2012. Modeling disability
trajectories and mortality of the oldest old in China. Demography 49(1):291-314.
_______, Zachary Zimmer, and Baai-Shyun Hurng. 2011. Trends in late-life disability in
Taiwan: The roles of education, environment, and technology. Population Studies. 65:3, 289304.
_______, Robert F. Schoeni, and Patricia M. Andreski. 2010. Trends in health of older adults in
the United States: Past, present, future. Demography 47(Special):S17-S40.
_______. 2010. Demography and aging. Pp. 33-45 in R.H. Binstock and L.K. George, eds.,
Handbook of Aging and the Social Sciences, Elsevier.
______, Vicki A. Freedman, Patricia M. Andreski, and Robert F. Schoeni. 2010. Recent trends
in disability and related chronic conditions among people ages fifty to sixty-four. Health Affairs
29(4):725-731.
______, Robert F. Schoeni, and Patricia M. Andreski. 2010. Challenges in estimating trends in
late-life disability from the American Community Survey. Journal of Gerontology: Medical
Sciences 65A(5):517-518.
_______. 2009. Demography of aging: Interventions to improve late life. Population and
Development Review 35(2):331-340.
______, Vicki A. Freedman, Robert F. Schoeni, and Patricia M. Andreski. 2009. Health and
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functioning of the Baby Boom approaching 60. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences. 64(3):
369-377.
Robert F. Schoeni, Vicki A. Freedman, and ______. 2009. Socioeconomic and demographic
disparities in trends in old-age disability. Pp. 75-102 in David M. Cutler and David A. Wise,
eds., Health at Older Ages: The Causes and Consequences of Declining Disability Among the
Elderly, University of Chicago Press. (Earlier version:
http://www.nber.org/books/disability/schoeni-et-al2-10-05.pdf .)
Vicki A. Freedman, _______, Jennifer Cornman, Emily M. Agree, and Robert F. Schoeni. 2009.
Trends in assistance with daily activities: Racial/ethnic and socioeconomic disparities persist in
the U.S. older population. Pp. 411-438 in David M. Cutler and David A. Wise, eds., Health at
Older Ages: The Causes and Consequences of Declining Disability Among the Elderly,
University of Chicago Press. (Earlier version: http://www.nber.org/books/disability/freedman-etal10-24-06.pdf .)
______. 2009. Disability and functional limitation, later life. Pp. 120-129 in Deborah Carr, ed.,
Encyclopedia of the Life Course and Human Development, Volume 3, Later Life, Macmillan
USA.
Vicki A. Freedman, _______, Robert F. Schoeni, and Jennifer Cornman. 2008. Declines in latelife disability: The role of early- and mid-life factors. Social Science and Medicine 66(7):15881602.
Robert F. Schoeni, Vicki A. Freedman, and ______. 2008. Why is late-life disability declining?
Milbank Quarterly 86(1):47-87.
Vicki A. Freedman, Robert F. Schoeni, ______, and Jennifer Cornman. 2007. Chronic
conditions and the decline in late-life disability. Demography 44(3):459-477.
Zachary Zimmer and _______. 2007. Key topics in the study of older adult health in developing
countries that are experiencing population aging. Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology
22(3):235-241.
Zachary Zimmer, ______, Mary Beth Ofstedal, and Yi-Li Chuang. 2007. Education of adult
children and mortality of their elderly parents in Taiwan. Demography 44(2):289-305.
______, Robert F. Schoeni, Vicki A. Freedman, and Patricia Andreski. 2007. Feeling better?
Trends in general health status. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences 62B(1):S11-S21.
Vicki A. Freedman and ________. 2006. Commentary: Dissecting disability trends--Concepts,
measures, and explanations. International Journal of Epidemiology 35(5):1261-1263.
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Vicki A. Freedman, Emily M. Agree, _______, Jennifer Cornman. 2006. Trends in the use of
assistive technology and personal care for late-life disability, 1992-2001. The Gerontologist
46(1):124-127.
Robert F. Schoeni, ______, Patricia Andreski, and Vicki A. Freedman. 2005. Persistent and
growing disparities in disability among the elderly: 1982-2002. American Journal of Public
Health 95(11):2065-2070.
Zachary Zimmer, _____, and Hui-sheng Lin. 2005. Determinants of old-age mortality in Taiwan.
Social Science and Medicine 60(3):457-470.
Vicki A. Freedman, Eileen Crimmins, Robert F. Schoeni, Brenda Spillman, Hakan Aykan, Ellen
Kramarow, Kenneth Land, James Lubitz, Kenneth Manton, _____, Diane Shinberg, and Timothy
Waidmann. 2004. Resolving inconsistencies in old-age disability trends: Report from a
technical working group. Demography 41(3):417-441.
Vicki A. Freedman and ______. 2004. Incorporating disability into population-level models of
health change at older ages. Journal of Gerontology 59A(6):M602-M603.
Vicki A. Freedman and ______. 2003. Beyond inconsistent results: Finding the truth about
trends in late-life cognitive functioning. Journal of Gerontology 58B(6):S347-S348.
Vicki A. Freedman, _____, and Robert F. Schoeni. 2002. Recent trends in disability and
functioning among older U.S. adults. Journal of the American Medical Association
288(24):3137-3146.
Zachary Zimmer, _____, and Ming-Cheng Chang. 2002. Changes in functional limitations and
survival among the elderly in Taiwan: 1993, 1996, and 1999. Population Studies 56(3):265-276.
_____. 2002. Japan. In D.J. Ekerdt, R.A. Applebaum, K.C. Holden, S.G. Post, K. Rockwood, R.
Schulz, R.L. Sprott, and P. Uhlenberg, eds., Encyclopedia of Aging, Macmillan Reference USA.
Vicki A. Freedman, Hakan Aykan, and _____. 2002. Another look at aggregate changes in
severe cognitive impairment: Further investigation into the cumulative effects of three survey
design issues. Journal of Gerontology 57B(2):S126-S131.
M.A. Stoto, A.I. Hermalin, R. Li, ______, R.B. Wallace, and D.L. Weed. 2001. Advocacy in
epidemiology and demography. Pp. 76-87 in M. Weinstein, A.I. Hermalin, and M.A. Stoto,
eds., Population Health and Aging: Strengthening the Dialogue between Epidemiology and
Demography, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
Vicki A. Freedman, Hakan Aykan, and _____. 2001. Aggregate changes in severe cognitive
impairment among older Americans: 1993 and 1998. Journal of Gerontology 56B(2): S100-11.
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_____. 2000. Six billion and counting. Harvard International Review 22(3):222-27.
Vicki A. Freedman and _____. 2000. Contribution of chronic conditions to aggregate changes
in old-age functioning. American Journal of Public Health 90(11):1755-60.
Vicki A. Freedman and _____. 1999. The role of education in explaining and forecasting trends
in functional limitations among older Americans. Demography 36(4):461-473.
Hakan Aykan, Vicki A. Freedman, and ______. 1999. Re-weighting the Second Supplement on
Aging to the 1994 National Health Interview Survey for trend analyses. RAND Labor and
Population Program Working Paper Series DRU-2066-NIA.
_____. 1999. Dynamics of the demographic transition in Asia. Regional Conference on
Ageing, Japanese Organization for International Cooperation in Family Planning, Tokyo, Japan,
July 6-9.
Vicki A. Freedman and _____. 1998. Understanding trends in functional limitations among
older Americans. American Journal of Public Health 88(10):1457-1462.
Sumner J. La Croix and _____. 1995. Damages in wrongful pregnancy tort actions. In T.R.
Ireland and J.O. Ward, eds., Valuing Children in Litigation: Family and Individual Loss
Assessment, Lawyer and Judges Publishing.
_____ and Kevin Kinsella. 1994. Research on the demography of aging in developing countries.
Pp. 356-404 in Linda G. Martin and Samuel H. Preston, eds., The Demography of Aging,
National Academy Press.
_____. 1993. Review of David R. Phillips, ed., Ageing in East and South-East Asia, in Ageing
and Society 13(1):129-131.
_____. 1992. Population aging and the Golden Plan in Japan. 1993 Medical and Health
Annual of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Reprinted in Caring (journal of the National
Association for Home Care) 11(10):90-93.
_____. 1992. Japan's next lesson? World Monitor (The Christian Science Monitor Monthly)
5(7):13-14.
_____ and Noriko O. Tsuya. 1992. Japanese women in the middle. Paper presented in the
session on Combining Work and Family: Tensions and Trade-Offs, annual meeting of the
Population Association of America, April.
Noriko O. Tsuya and _____. 1992. Living arrangements of elderly Japanese and attitudes
toward inheritance. Journal of Gerontology 47(2):S45-S54. (Also in Family and the
Contemporary Japanese Culture: An International Perspective, University Research Center,
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Nihon University, 1991.)
_____. 1991. Aging in America. Paper presented at the International Symposium on Older
People, sponsored by the Policy Office for the Aged, Government of Japan, Japan Aging
Research Center, and Sumitomo Kaijo Welfare Foundation, Tokyo, November.
James N. Gribble and _____. 1991. Epidemiological transitions in Africa, Asia, and Latin
America. Paper presented at the Workshop on the Policy and Planning Implications of the
Epidemiological Transition, National Research Council, November.
_____ and Noriko O. Tsuya. 1991. Interactions of middle-aged Japanese with their parents.
Population Studies 45(2):299-311.
_____. 1991. Population aging policies in East Asia and the United States. Science 251:527531.
_____. 1990. Changing intergenerational family relations in East Asia. The Annals of the
American Academy of Political and Social Science 510 (July):102-114.
_____. 1990. The status of South Asia's growing elderly population. Journal of Cross-Cultural
Gerontology 5(2):93-117.
Lee-Jay Cho and _____. 1990. Foreign investment and demographic dynamics of the
Asia-Pacific region. Asian Economic Journal 4(1):46-68.
_____. 1989. Living arrangements of the elderly in Fiji, Korea, Malaysia, and the Philippines.
Demography 26(4):627-643.
_____. 1989. Emerging issues in crossnational survey research on aging in Asia. International
Population Conference, New Delhi, 1989 (Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of
Population) 3:69-80.
_____ and Susan Kalish. 1989. Japan copes with its “Honorable Elders”: Retirement and health
benefit systems in Japan. EBRI Issue Brief 92, Employee Benefit Research Institute.
_____. 1988. Potential effects of mortality decline on the living arrangements of the elderly in
four Asian-Pacific countries. Paper presented at the Seminar on Mortality Transition in East and
South Asia, sponsored by the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, Beijing,
August.
_____. 1988. The aging of Asia. Journal of Gerontology 43(4):S99-S113.
John C. Wilson, _____, and Robin Loomis. 1988. Feasibility analysis for an international
family planning training center in Indonesia. Paper presented at the Planning Seminar for an
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International Training Center, National Family Planning Coordinating Board, Jakarta and
Jogyakarta, Indonesia, March.
_____ and Naohiro Ogawa. 1988. The effect of cohort size on relative wages in Japan. In R.L.
Lee, W.B. Arthur, and G. Rodgers, eds., Economics of Changing Age Distributions in Developed
Countries, Oxford University Press.
_____. 1987. Review of W.W. Farris, Population, Disease, and Land in Early Japan, in
Journal of Asian and African Studies 12(1-2):97-99.
_____. 1987. Census data for studying elderly populations. Asia-Pacific Population Journal
(ESCAP, Bangkok) 2( 2):69-82.
_____. 1987. Female education and fertility in Bangladesh. Asian and Pacific Population
Forum 1(3).
Andrew Mason and _____. 1986. Recent trends in household structure in Asia. In Proceedings
of Conference on Population Change in Taiwan During the 20th Century, December 14-15th,
1985, Taipei, Population Association of China.
_____ and Robert E. Evenson. 1986. Birth spacing in Laguna: Individual, labor market, and
community determinants.
James Trussell, _____, Robert Feldman, James A. Palmore, Mercedes Concepcion, and Datin
Noor Laily Bt. Dato' Abu Bakar. 1985. Determinants of birth interval length in the Philippines,
Malaysia, and Indonesia: A hazard model analysis. Demography 22(2):145-168.
_____. 1984. The International Conference on Population: Asia and the Pacific go to Mexico.
Asian and Pacific Census Forum 11(1).
_____ and Suzanne Culter. 1983. Mortality decline and Japanese family structure. Population
and Development Review 9(4):633-649.
_____, James Trussell, Florentina Reyes Salvail, and Nasra M. Shah. 1983. Covariates of child
mortality in the Philippines, Indonesia, and Pakistan: An analysis based on hazard models.
Population Studies 37(3):417-432.
_____. 1983. Japan's old workers learn demographic facts of life. Asian Wall Street Journal
(Commentary and Analysis Page, July 28).
_____ and Andrew Mason. 1982. Family matrices: A technique for linking generations.
_____. 1982. Age pattern of employment response to the business cycle in Japan. Paper
presented in the session on Labor Force Analysis, annual meeting of the Population Association
17
of America, April.
_____. 1982. Japanese response to an aging labor force. Population Research and Policy
Review 1(1):19-41.
Andrew Mason and _____. 1982. Intergenerational differences in income: An analysis of
Japan. Population and Development Review 8 Supplement:179-191.
Kenichi Furuya and _____. 1981. Employment and retirement of older workers in Japan,.
Nihon University Population Research Institute Research Paper Series (Tokyo) 8, 24 pp.
_____. 1980. Review of S.H. Cochrane, Fertility and Education, and R.C. Repetto, Economic
Equality and Fertility in Developing Countries, in Journal of Development Economics
7(4):591-595.
_____. 1980. A modification for use in destabilized populations of Brass's technique for
estimating completeness of death registration. Population Studies 34(2):381-395.
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