
IRP Book Talk: Zach Parolin on Poverty in the Pandemic: Policy Lessons from COVID-19
- Zach Parolin
- Podcasts
- September 11 2023

Improving How Poverty Is Measured: A Recommendation To Better Reflect Households’ Basic Needs
- James Ziliak, Barbara Wolfe, Jane Waldfogel, Ingrid Gould Ellen, and Indivar Dutta-Gupta
- Webinar
- July 26 2023

U.S. Energy Insecurity and How to Better Serve Vulnerable Communities
- Diana Hernández, Gabriela Sandoval, and Destenie Nock
- Webinar
- June 22 2022

The Wisconsin Approach to Developing Administrative Data Resources for Research & Evaluation
- Hilary Shager, Steven Cook, Kristina Trastek, Marah A. Curtis, and Lawrence Berger
- Webinar
- May 11 2022

José Pacas on the Puzzle of Measuring Rural Poverty in the Supplemental Poverty Measure
- José Pacas
- Podcasts
- April 29 2022

Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement 38(1), March 2022 – One Recession, Disparate Recoveries: Assessing Change and Stability Following the Great Recession
- Edited by James T. Spartz
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- March 2022

Recession and Recovery Impacts on Foreign- and U.S.-Born Latinos in the United States
- Pia M. Orrenius and Madeline Zavodny
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- March 2022

Racial Disparities in Household Wealth Following the Great Recession
- Fenaba R. Addo and William A. Darity, Jr.
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- March 2022

Economic Outcomes for Indigenous Peoples in the United States Following the Great Recession
- Randall Akee
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- March 2022

How Better Measurement Can Improve Transportation Equity in Underserved Communities
- Alix Gould-Werth, Alexandra Murphy, and Aaron Steiner
- Webinar
- November 30 2021
Wisconsin Poverty Project
IRP Affiliate and former Director Timothy Smeeding began the Wisconsin Poverty Project in late 2008 to create a more accurate and timely assessment of poverty in Wisconsin. The Wisconsin Poverty Measure is based on the federal Supplemental Poverty Measure.
Smeeding releases an annual Wisconsin Poverty Report summarizing his most recent findings each spring. The goals of the Wisconsin Poverty Measure are to inform state policy and serve as a model for other states and localities seeking to craft their own more meaningful measures of poverty.