For a copy of the report and the policy brief on Latinas: Socioeconomic Changes among Hispanic Women in the United States, 1990-2014, visit the CLACLS Latino Data Project.
One of the reasons that Latina household heads had lower incomes was in all likelihood linked to deficiencies in the application of these laws.
Until a marked increase in rates of college graduation are achieved by both sexes, poverty will remain a central component of the Latina and Latino experience.
However, despite being better educated than their male counterparts, Latinas make less money and have higher rates of poverty.
The CLACLS’s flagship program is the Latino Data Project, established in 2003 by Laird W. Bergad founding and current CLACLS director.
Fuente: http://cnnespanol.cnn.com/2016/09/13/nationwide-latina-voters-in-america-boast-higher-voter-registration-and-participation-rates-than-hispanic-men/
