Institute for Research on Poverty | |
Established: | March 1966 |
Type: | Applied |
Research Field: | Economics |
Director: | Katherine Magnuson |
City: | Madison |
State: | Wisconsin |
Country: | United States |
Campus: | University of Wisconsin–Madison |
The Institute for Research on Poverty is a nonprofit, nonpartisan research institute at the University of Wisconsin–Madison dedicated to studying poverty and economic inequality. It was established in March 1966, as a result of an agreement between UW–Madison and the Office of Economic Opportunity.[1] It is the oldest center for poverty research still active in the United States,[2] and had over 150 faculty affiliates from universities across the United States (as of 2017).[3]
The key figure behind its founding was Robert Lampman, a professor of economics at UW–Madison, who also served as the Institute's interim director.[1] [4] Lampman did not expect the Institute to last for very long, as he thought poverty in the United States would be eliminated soon after its founding.[5]
The following people have been director of the Institute: