Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy
Home to the Multidisciplinary Program in Inequality & Social Policy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government. Through research and education, the Malcolm Wiener Center strives to improve public policy and practice in the areas of health care, human services, criminal justice, inequality, education, and labor.
The Boston Research Consortium
With the collaboration of Harvard's Institute for Quantitative Social Science and Harvard's Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston, the Boston Research Program aims to "provide an institutional structure for promoting research on, and based in, greater metropolitan Boston."
Center for American Political Studies (CAPS)
Led by an interdisciplinary group of political scientists, sociologists, economists, and historians at Harvard University, the Center for American Political Studies fosters discussion, research, public outreach, and pedagogy about all aspects of modern U.S. politics.
Civil Rights Project
The mission of the Harvard Civil Rights Project is "to help renew the civil rights movement by bridging the worlds of ideas and action, and by becoming a preeminent source of intellectual capital and a forum for building consensus within that movement."
Joblessness and Urban Poverty Research Program
Established in 1996 under the direction of William Julius Wilson, the Joblessness and Urban Poverty Research Program seeks to analyze the effects of increasing urban poverty and joblessness plaguing the inner cities and to ensure that scholarly research plays a critical role in the creation and implementation of national public policy concerning the poor.
Migration and Immigrant Incorporation Workshop Home to a broad range of interests under the general rubric of immigration studies. Designed primarily to circulate academic works in progress among its doctoral student and faculty participants.
Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies The Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies is dedicated to fostering the study of European history, politics, and society at Harvard.
Program on Education Policy and Governance (PEPG)
Established in 1996 under the direction of Paul E. Peterson, PEPG is dedicated to the systematic analysis of education policy and governing arrangements.
Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston
Strives to "improve the governance of Greater Boston by fostering better connections between the region's scholars, policymakers, and civic leaders."
Saguaro Seminar: Civic Engagement in America
The Saguaro Seminar "strives to develop a handful of far-reaching, actionable ideas to significantly increase Americans' connectedness to one another and to community institutions."
W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research
The W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research is the nation's oldest research center dedicated to the study of the history, culture, and social institutions of Africans and African Americans.
Women and Public Policy Program
The Women and Public Policy Program aims to incorporate "an understanding of gender perspectives on public policy" and to "contribute to the canon of scholarship on women and public policy."
HARVARD Ph.D. DEPARTMENTS | PROGRAMS
Department of Economics
Harvard University's Department of Economics, Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
Department of Government
Harvard University's program for the study of political science, Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
Ph.D. Program in Public Policy
Prepares candidates to shape the direction of public policy research and to train the next generation of teachers for programs in public policy.
Department of Sociology
Harvard University's program for the study of sociology, Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
Ph.D. Programs in Social Policy
Combining the disciplinary depth of a Ph.D in political science or sociology with the multidisciplinary study social policy. Links the departments of Government and Sociology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences with the Social Policy faculty at the John F. Kennedy School of Government.
This data guide has been updated from a version originally created by Carrie Conaway, now Deputy Director of the New England Public Policy Center, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
Employment, unemployment, earnings, prices, compensation, productivity, technology, employment projections, international prices, foreign labor. Much data available to download, though not all interactively.
Demographics, poverty, income, housing, home ownership, state and county profiles. Produces the Decennial Census, the Current Population Survey, the Survey of Income and Program Participation, the Economic Census, and the Census of Housing. Most data are easily downloadable.
Joint project of the BLS and Census Bureau. Monthly survey of about 50,000 U.S. households, with some households in sample followed for up to two years. Questions mainly deal with labor force information. March Demographic Supplement is even more detailed. Additional supplements available on: contingent workers and alternative employment; displaced workers; job tenure and occupational mobility; race and ethnicity; school enrollment; work experience, food security; computer ownership; and fertility and marital history. Data are easily downloadable via Ferret.
The appendix of the Economic Report of the President contains a number of useful statistical tables which are available for downloading from the Council of Economic Advisors. Topics: GDP, prices, consumption, trade, personal disposable income, employment/unemployment, demographics, employment cost, productivity, money, credit, finance, national income and product accounts, corporate profits, agriculture, and international statistics.
Produced biennially by the Department of Health and Human Services. Contains information and statistics on many social programs, including: Social Security, Medicare, Supplemental Security Income, Unemployment Compensation, Earned Entitlement for Railroad Employees, Trade Adjustment Assistance, Aid for Families with Dependent Children / Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, child support enforcement, child care, Title XX Block Grants, child protection / foster care / adoption. Also general data on the elderly, poverty, employment, and families. Text and tables downloadable.
The Luxembourg Income Study (LIS)
is a non-profit cooperative research project with a membership that includes 25 countries on four continents: Europe, America, Asia and Oceania. The project is mainly funded by the national science and social science research foundations of its member countries. The LIS database is a collection of household income surveys. These surveys provide demographic, income and expenditure information on three different levels: household, person and child.
The Luxembourg Employment Study (LES) is a parent project of LIS that was initiated in 1994. This project has been partly funded by the Human capital and Mobility Programme of the European Commission and the Norwegian Research Council. The LES database includes Labour Force Surveys from countries with quite different labour market structures. These surveys provide detailed information on areas like job search, employment characteristics, comparable occupations, investment in education, migration, etc.
Data and tables available on: macroeconomic trends, business cycles, industries, consumer expenditures, etc. You can also download data sets used in some NBER publications for reanalysis.
A series of longitudinal studies conducted by the Department of Labor to collect information on the labor market experiences of people at different stages of labor market participation. The most commonly used part of these data is the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, whose roughly 13,000 participants are nationally representative of individuals aged 14 to 22 in 1979. Not available on the web, but inexpensive CDs are available and come with a program to make compiling the data easy.
A nationally representative panel study begun in 1968 with about 5,000 individuals. Today the sample comprises about 50,000 individuals, with information for some going back as many as 28 years. Focuses on labor market and income information, plus some supplements on fertility, health, wealth, kinship, etc. Data are downloadable for free on the web, along with codebooks, questionnaires, etc.
Sponsored by the American Economics Association, the guide "lists more than 1,600 resources in 97 sections and sub-sections available on the Internet of interest to academic and practicing economists, and those interested in economics."
A continuous series of nationally representative panels starting in 1984 with sample sizes between 14,000 and 36,700 and durations of 2-1/2 to 4 years. Collects information on labor force participation, income, program participation, and program eligibility. Good for evaluating short-term trends.
A description of survey content and data quality/availability for selected surveys measuring children's well-being. Developed by Jeffrey Kling in connection the Moving to Opportunity demonstration program.
Contains general data accumulated from a variety of government agencies. Relevant topics covered include: population, health and nutrition, education, law enforcement, social insurance and human services, labor force / employment / earnings, income and wealth, foreign commerce, and industrial outlook. Text and tables downloadable.
Compiled by the University of Michigan libraries. Relevant topics covered include: agriculture, business and industry, cost of living, demographics, earnings, the economy, education, foreign trade, health, and labor.