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About Daniel
Lichter has published widely on topics in population and public policy; including studies of concentrated poverty and inequality; intermarriage; cohabitation and marriage among disadvantaged women; and immigrant incorporation. His recent work has focused on changing ethnoracial boundaries; as measured by changing patterns of interracial marriage and residential segregation in The United States. He is especially interested in America's racial and ethnic transformation; growing diversity; and the implications for the future. His other work centers on new destinations of recent immigrants; especially Hispanics moving to less densely-settled rural areas. Lichter is a member of the research advisory board of the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unintended Pregnancy. He is also a policy fellow of the Carsey Institute at the University of New Hampshire; and a member of the poverty working group (on race and ethnicity) at the Stanford Center of Poverty and Inequality. He is currently serving as a member of the National Academy Sciences panel on "The Integration of Immigrants into American Society."