tag:news.nd.edu,2005:/news/authors/rachel-fulcher-dawson tag:news.nd.edu,2005:/latest Notre Dame News | Notre Dame News | News 2018-07-19T10:00:00-04:00 Notre Dame News gathers and disseminates information that enhances understanding of the University’s academic and research mission and its accomplishments as a Catholic institute of higher learning. tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/88238 2018-07-19T10:00:00-04:00 2018-11-29T13:13:52-05:00 Professor James Sullivan appointed to Commission on Social Impact Partnerships , University of Notre Dame professor of and co-founder of the University’s (LEO), has been appointed to serve as a member of the U.S. Commission on Social Impact Partnerships.

The bipartisan commission, created by the 2018 Social Impact Partnerships to Pay for Results Act, will advise the Treasury Department on the selection of state and local pay-for-success projects that will be supported by a new $100 million fund. The goal of SIPPRA is to encourage public-private partnerships that improve the effectiveness of social programs.

Members of the commission are nominated by the president of the United States and a bipartisan group of congressional leaders. Sullivan was nominated by Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Paul Ryan. 

Sullivan’s work with LEO, a nonpartisan research center dedicated to reducing poverty and improving lives in the U.S. through evidence-based programs and policies, will inform his contribution to the commission. LEO is actively engaged with 41 different government and nonprofit agencies in 21 cities nationwide on 30 completed or ongoing evaluations. These programs include those aimed at improving outcomes in education, health, criminal justice, housing and self-sufficiency. 

“I am honored to be appointed to this commission, which will enhance and accelerate the work being done across the country to increase the number and type of evidence-based programs that serve the poor and vulnerable,” Sullivan said. “This bipartisan commission will allow researchers, social service providers and policymakers alike to expand the use of evidence ensuring more people are served, more effectively and more efficiently.”

The Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities matches top researchers with social service providers to conduct impact evaluations that identify innovative, effective and scalable programs and policies that support self-sufficiency. LEO’s research is conducted by Notre Dame faculty as well as an interdisciplinary network of scholars from across the country with expertise in designing and evaluating the impact of domestic programs aimed at reducing poverty and improving lives. LEO disseminates its key findings to policymakers and front-line providers in order to support evidence-based policy and programming decisions that effectively and jointly reduce poverty in the United States. Learn more at .

Contact: James Sullivan, 574-631-7587, jsulliv4@nd.edu

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Rachel Fulcher-Dawson
tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/78430 2017-07-31T11:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T21:10:14-04:00 LEO earns $700,000 in funding awards Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities

The Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities will use the funds to support continued anti-poverty work.

Read more:.

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Rachel Fulcher-Dawson
tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/71031 2016-11-02T13:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T21:09:38-04:00 James Sullivan to testify before Commission on Evidence-Based Policymaking James Sullivan

, co-founder of the (LEO) and Rev. Thomas J. McDonagh, C.S.C., Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Notre Dame, will testify Friday (Nov. 4) before the Commission on Evidence-Based Policymaking in Washington, D.C.

Sullivan will present recommendations developed by LEO regarding non-governmental demand for evaluation. His testimony is based on LEO’s work with nonprofit social service agencies across the country that work to improve anti-poverty solutions via evidence-based research.

Private social service providers spend $200 billion annually on programs for vulnerable populations. Many innovative providers and programs are working to design new programs to address the needs of poor families. Sullivan says, “To promote evidence-based policymaking in government, we need to do more than evaluate government programs. To design better programs in Washington, we need to know what works outside of Washington.”

Sullivan will address the challenges agencies encounter when trying to be data-driven and to use evidence to improve programming. LEO works with agencies to use data they collect and to connect it to existing administrative data to measure impact and improve programming. He says, “Unfortunately, all too often, even the most promising local programs are not evaluated, in large part because the nongovernmental agencies that run them do not have access to the data necessary to measure impact.”

Administrative data is collected regularly by most government programs and includes important impact outcomes such as earnings records, government program participation, arrest records and education records. Being able to measure the impact of a given program on these outcomes shifts agency work from counting the number of people served to demonstrating how people are better off because of a given program. Sullivan will encourage the commission to include his recommendations about the needs of private social service providers in its final report.

The event will be webcast live beginning at 10:10 a.m. EDT and is available through host Brookings Institution’s .

The Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities (LEO) is a research lab housed in the at the University of Notre Dame. LEO matches top researchers with social service providers to conduct impact evaluations that identify the innovative, effective and scalable programs and policies that support self-sufficiency. LEO’s research is conducted by Notre Dame faculty as well as an interdisciplinary network of scholars from across the country with expertise in designing and evaluating the impact of domestic programs aimed at reducing poverty and improving lives. LEO disseminates its key findings to policymakers and front-line providers in order to support evidence-based policy and programming decisions that effectively and jointly reduce poverty in the United States. Learn more at .

The Commission on Evidence-Based Policymaking was established by the bipartisan Evidence-Based Policymaking Commission Act of 2016. The act recognizes that better use of existing data may improve how government programs operate. The mission of the commission is to develop a strategy for increasing the availability and use of data in order to build evidence about government programs, while protecting privacy and confidentiality. Through the course of the commission’s work, members will study how data, research and evaluation are currently used to build evidence, and how to strengthen the government’s evidence-building efforts. Learn more at .

Contact: James Sullivan, 574-631-7587, jsulliv4@nd.edu

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Rachel Fulcher-Dawson