Gooden, S.T. (1998). All things not being equal: Differences in caseworker support toward Black and White welfare clients. Harvard Journal of African AmericanPublic Policy, 4, 23-33.
2.
Harrell, J.P., Hall, S., & Taliaferro, J. (2003). Physiological responses to racism and discrimination: An assessment of the evidence. American Journal of Public Health, 93(2), 243-248.
3.
Keiser, L.R., Mueser, P.R., & Choi, S. (2004). Race, bureaucratic discretion, and the implementation of welfare reform. American Journal of Political Science, 48(2), 314-327.
4.
Kuh, D., & Y. Shlomo (Eds.). (2004). A life course approach to chronic diseases epidemiology. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
5.
Loprest, P. (1999). How families that left welfare are doing: A national picture (Series B, No. B-1). Washington, DC: Urban Institute .
6.
Nazroo, J.Y. (2003). The structuring of ethnic inequalities in health: Economic position, racial discrimination, and racism. American Journal of Public Health, 93(2), 277-284.
7.
Singh-Manoux, A., Ferrie, J.E., Chandola, T., & Marmot, M. (2004). Socioeconomic trajectories across the life course and health outcomes in midlife: evidence for the accumulation hypothesis?International Journal of Epidemiology, 33(5), 1072-1079.
8.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. ( 2000). Healthy people 2010 (Conference edition, in 2 volumes). Washington, DC: Author.