Homeownership Among Immigrants Continues to Decline Kids in immigrant families are more likely than U.S.-born peers to live in households spending over 30% of income on housing (33% compared with 45%). Read More
Children in Immigrant Families Less Likely to Be Financially Secure Kids in immigrant families are more likely to live in low-income working households than U.S.-born peers, 37% vs. 22%, despite higher full-time employment. Read More
More Children in Immigrant Families In 2013, 17.8 million children lived in immigrant families, a 26% increase from the last decade. Of these children, 89% are U.S. citizens. Read More
Taking Stock of the Texas "Closer to Home" Study: Ten Lessons for the Juvenile Justice Field The Casey Foundation's Nate Balis explores the national implications of groundbreaking research on juvenile-justice reforms in Texas. Read More
CSG Report Offers National Implications for the Juvenile Justice Field A new study from the Council of State Governments and Texas A&M reviews the impact of Texas’s juvenile justice reform efforts. Read more. Read More
Five Questions with Casey: Kweku Forstall and the Atlanta Civic Site Kweku Forstall leads efforts in southwest Atlanta to boost education and economic opportunity for children, families and communities. Learn more. Read More
Second Year of Low-Cost RCT Competition Launched The Coalition for Evidence-Based Policy is holding a three-year competition to select and fund promising low-cost randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Read More
Connect With KIDS COUNT on Social Media Learn how to connect with KIDS COUNT and the Casey Foundation on social media. Read More
Detention Reform Pays Off: Bed Reductions Are Saving JDAI Sites More Than $100 Million Per Year JDAI sites are saving millions of dollars because of population reductions. Read More
Let KIDS COUNT Send You the Latest Data on Child Well-Being Sign up to receive email updates on child well-being indicators new to the KIDS COUNT Data Center. Read More