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Gary
J. Gates
Senior Research Fellow
The Williams Institute welcomes Gary J. Gates, PhD to the
UCLA School of Law as a Senior Research Fellow. Dr. Gates is
co-author of The Gay and Lesbian Atlas and is widely
acknowledged as the nation's leading expert on the
demography and geography of the gay and lesbian population.
His doctoral dissertation included the first significant
research exploring characteristics of same-sex couples using
U.S. Census data. He has since published extensively on the
demographic and economic traits of the lesbian and gay
population. His work has been featured in many national and
international media outlets, including the New York Times,
the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, USA Today, the
Financial Times, and National Public Radio.
Prior to completing his PhD from the H. John Heinz School
of Public Policy and Management at Carnegie Mellon
University, Dr. Gates facilitated the development of and
co-authored a statewide HIV prevention plan for
Pennsylvania. Gates' background includes a Master of
Divinity degree from St. Vincent Seminary and a Bachelor of
Science degree in Computer Science from the University of
Pittsburgh at Johnstown.
Dr. Gates' current research projects include a series of
studies exploring the demographics and economic traits of
Asian Pacific Islanders, Latino/as, and African-Americans in
same-sex couples in California, a study of bi-national
same-sex couples in the United States, and an NIH-funded
research project comparing same-sex couples in the United
States and Canada.
Dr. Gates' position at the Williams Institute was made
possible by a generous grant from the Gill Foundation.
PUBLICATIONS
- The Gay and Lesbian Atlas (with Jason Ost),
Urban Institute Press, May 2004.
-
Demographics of the Gay and Lesbian Population in the
United States: Evidence from Available Systematic Data
Sources (with Dan Black, Seth Sanders, and Lowell Taylor),
Demography 37 (2): 139-154, May 2000.
- Why Do Gay Men Live In San Francisco? (with Dan Black,
Seth Sanders, and Lowell Taylor), Journal of Urban
Economics 51(1): 54-74, January 2002.
- Gay Men and Lesbians in the Military: Estimates
from Census 2000, Urban Institute Research Report,
September 2004.
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