1. Kellam, S.G., Branch, J.D., Agrawal, K.C., & Ensminger, M.E. (1972). Strategies in urban community mental health. In S. E. Golamin & C. Eisdorfer (Eds.), Handbook of Community Mental Health. (pp. 711-727). New York: Appleton Century Crofts.
2. Kellam, S.G., Petersen, A.C., Ensminger, M.E., & Branch, J.D. (1975). Psychiatric aspects of child day programs. In A. M. Freedman, H. I. Kaplan, & B. J. Sadock (Eds.), Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry, Volume II. (pp. 2292-2301). Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins. 3. Kellam, S.G., Branch, J.D., Agrawal, K.C., & Ensminger, M.E. (1977). Mental health and going to school: The Woodlawn program of assessment, early intervention and evaluation. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. 4. Kellam, S.G., Ensminger, M.E., & Turner, R.J. (1977). Family structure and the mental health of children. Concurrent and longitudinal community-wide studies. Archives of General Psychiatry, 34(9), 1012-1022. 5. Petersen, A.C., & Kellam, S.G. (1977). Measurement of psychological well-being of adolescents: The psychometric properties and assessment procedures of the How I Feel. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 6(3), 229-247. 6. Agrawal, K.C., Kellam, S.G., Klein, Z.E., & Turner, R.J. (1978). The Woodlawn mental health studies: Tracking children and families for long-term follow-up. American Journal of Public Health, 68, 139-142. 7. Kellam, S.G. & Ensminger, M.E. (1980). Theory and method in child psychiatric epidemiology. In F.J. Earls (Ed.), Studies of Children (pp. 145-180). New York: Prodist.
8. Kellam, S.G., Ensminger, M.E., & Simon, M.B. (1980). Mental health in first grade and teenage drug, alcohol, and cigarette use. Drug & Alcohol Dependence, 5, 273-304.
9. Kellam, S.G., Brown, C.H., & Russell, G. (1981). Why teenagers come for treatment: A ten-year prospective epidemiological study in Woodlawn. Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry, 20, 477-495.
10. Brown, C.H., Adams, R.G., & Kellam, S.G. (1981). A longitudinal study of teenage motherhood and symptoms of distress: The Woodlawn community epidemiological project. Research in Community and Mental Health, 2, 183-213.
11. Fleming, J.P., Kellam, S.G., & Brown, C.H. (1982). Early predictors of age at first use of alcohol, marijuana, and cigarettes. Drug & Alcohol Dependence, 9, 285-303.
12. Kellam, S.G., Brown, C.H., & Fleming, J.P. (1982). Developmental epidemiological studies of substance use in Woodlawn: Implications for prevention research strategy. In L. Harris (Ed.), Problems of Drug Dependence, 1981 (NIDA Research Monograph Series ed., pp. 21-33). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
13. Kellam, S.G., Adams, R.G., Brown, C.H., & Ensminger, M.E. (1982). The long-term evolution of the family structure of teenage and older mothers. Journal of Marriage and the Family,539-554.
14. Kellam, S.G., Brown, C.H., & Fleming, J.P. (1982). The prevention of teenage substance use: Longitudinal Research and strategy. In Promoting Adolescent Health (pp. 171-200). New York: Academic Press Inc.
15. Kellam, S.G., Brown, C.H., & Fleming, J.P. (1982). Social adaptation to first grade and teenage drug, alcohol, and cigarette use: Developmental epidemiological research in Woodlawn. Journal of School Health, 306.
16. Ensminger, M.E., Brown, C.H., & Kellam, S.G. (1982). Sex differences in antecedents of substance use among adolescents. Journal of Social Issues, 38, 25-42.
17. Kellam, S.G., Stevenson, D.L., & Rubin, B.R. (1983). How specific are the early predictors of teenage drug use? In L. Harris (Ed.), Problems of Drug Dependence, 1982 (NIDA Research Monograph Series ed., pp. 329-334). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
18. Kellam, S.G., Simon, M.B., & Ensminger, M.E. (1983). Antecedents in first grade of teenage substance use and psychological well-being: A ten-year community-wide prospective study. In D.F. Ricks & B. S. Dohrenwend (Eds.), Origins of Psychopathology (pp. 17-42). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
19. Kellam, S.G., Brown, C.H., Rubin, B.R., & Ensminger, M.E. (1983). Paths leading to teenage psychiatric symptoms and substance use: developmental epidemiological studies in Woodlawn. In S.B. Guze, F. J. Earls, & J. E. Barrett (Eds.), Childhood Psychopathology and Development (pp. 17-51). New York: Raven Press.
20. Ensminger, M.E., Kellam, S.G., & Rubin, B.R. (1983). School and family origins of delinquency: Comparisons by sex. In K.T. Van Dusen & S. A. Mednick (Eds.), Prospective studies of crime and delinquency (pp. 73-97). Boston: Kluwer-Nijhoff Publishing Co. 21. Ensminger, M.E. (1987). Implications of longitudinal studies on delinquency for prevention research. In: Preventing Mental Disorders: A Research Perspective (pp. 140-148), Center for Studies of Prevention, NIMH.
22. Thompson, M.S. & Ensminger, M.E. (1989). Psychological well-being among mothers with school age children: Evolving family structures. Social Forces, 67, 715-730.
23. Pearson, J.L., Hunter, A.G., Ensminger, M.E., & Kellam, S.G. (1990). Black grandmothers in multigenerational households: diversity in family structure and parenting involvement in the Woodlawn community. Child Development, 61, 434-442.
24. Ensminger, M.E. (1990). Sexual activity and problem behaviors among black, urban adolescents. Child Development, 61, 2032-2046.
25. Ensminger, M.E. & Slusarcick, A.L. (1992). Paths to high school graduation or dropout: a longitudinal study of a First-grade cohort. Sociology of Education, 65, 95-113.
26. Hunter, A.G. & Ensminger, M.E. (1992). Diversity and fluidity in children's living arrangements. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 418-426.
27. Ensminger, M.E. (1995). Welfare and psychological distress: A longitudinal study of African American urban mothers. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 36, 346-359.
28. Johnson, E.J., Schutz, C.G., Anthony, J.C., & Ensminger, M.E. (1995). Inhalants to heroin: a prospective analysis from adolescence to adulthood. Drug & Alcohol Dependence, 40, 159-164.
29. Ensminger, M.E., Lamkin, R.P., & Jacobson, N. (1996). School leaving: A longitudinal perspective including neighborhood effects. Child Development, 67, 2400-2416.
30. Ensminger, M.E., Anthony, J.C., & McCord, J. (1997). The inner city and drug use: initial findings from an epidemiological study. Drug & Alcohol Dependence, 48, 175-184.
31. Juon, H.S. & Ensminger, M.E. (1997). Childhood, adolescent and young adult predictors of suicidal behaviors: A prospective study of African Americans. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 38, 553-563.
32. McCord, J. & Ensminger, M.E. (1997). Multiple risks and comorbidity in an African-American population. Criminal Behavior and Mental Health, 7, 339-352.
33. Crum, R.M., Ensminger, M.E., Ro, M.J., & McCord, J. (1998). The association of educational achievement and school dropout with risk of alcoholism: A Twenty-five-year prospective study of Inner-city children. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 59, 318-326.
34. Ensminger, M.E. & Juon, H.S. (1998). Transition to adulthood among high-risk youth. In R. Jessor (Ed.), New perspectives on adolescent risk behavior (pp. 365-391). New York: Cambridge University Press.
35. Ensminger, M.E. & Juon, H.S. (2001). The influence of patterns of welfare receipt during the child rearing years on later physical and psychological health. Women & Health, 32, 25-46.
36. Ensminger, M.E. (2002). The Influence of Cohort on Personal Control Among Aging Persons. In S.H. Zarit, L.I. Pearlin, & K.W. Schaie (Eds.), Personal Control in Social and Life Contexts (New York: Springer Publishing.
37. Juon, H.S., Ensminger, M.E., & Sydnor, K. (2002). A longitudinal study of developmental trajectories to young adult cigarette smoking. Drug & Alcohol Dependence, 66, 303-314.
38. Astone, N.M., Ensminger, M.E., & Juon, H.S. (2002). Early adult characteristics and mortality among inner-city African American women. American Journal of Public Health, 92, 640-646.
39. Ensminger, M.E., Juon, H.S., & Fothergill, K. (2002). Childhood and adolescent antecedents of substance use in early adulthood. Addictions, 97, 833-844.
40. McCord, J. & Ensminger, M.E. (2003). Racial discrimination and violence: A longitudinal perspective. In D.F. Hawkins (Eds.), Violent Crime: Assessing Race and Ethnic Differences. (pp. 319-330). New York: Cambridge University Press.
41. Juon, H.S., Ensminger, M.E., & Feehan, M. (2003). Childhood adversity and later mortality in an urban African-American cohort. American Journal of Public Health, 93, 2044-2046. 42. Ensminger, M.E., Hanson, S.G., Riley, A.W., Juon, H.S. (in press). Maternal psychological distress: Adult sons' and daughters' mental health and educational attainment. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. 43. Williams, C.T., Juon, H.S., & Ensminger, M.E. (2004). Marijuana and cocaine use among female African-American welfare recipients. Drug Abuse and Dependency. 44. Nielson, M.J., Juon, H.S., & Ensminger, M.E. (2004). Preventing long term welfare receipt: the theoretical relationship between health and poverty over the early life course. Social Science & Medicine.
- Kub, J. (1991). Psychological Distress in Adolescents: A Longitudinal Study of the Influence of Chronic and Interpersonal Stressors, Life Events and Social Support. Doctoral Dissertation, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
- Jacobsen, J.M. (1998). Does Timing of first birth affect young adult outcomes in a population of at-risk African American women? (Doctoral Dissertation, Johns Hopkins University, 1998). Dissertation Abstracts International, 59, 1790-A.
- Lee, R.D. (2000). To Grandma's House we go: Grandparental Co-residence and Caregiving in the age of AIDS, crack and welfare reform. Doctoral dissertation, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
- Nielsen-McPherson, M.J. (2000). The relationship between early health and poverty and later welfare dependency in an urban African American community: A life course perspective. Doctoral dissertation, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
- Sydnor, K. (2001). Pathways to employment from first grade to young adulthood: a longitudinal study (Doctoral Dissertation, Johns Hopkins University, 2001). Dissertation Abstracts International, 62, 798-A.
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