Английская Википедия:Center for Retirement Research at Boston College

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Type Research center
Established 1998
Location Boston College, Haley House Chestnut Hill, MA, USA[1]
Director Alicia H. Munnell[2]
Board of Advisors Stuart Altman, Brandeis University, Barbara Bovbjerg, Government Accountability Office, Peter Diamond, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, J. Mark Iwry, Brookings Institution, Michael Orszag, Towers Watson, Angela O'Rand, Duke University
Website https://crr.bc.edu/
Файл:Haley House at Boston College.png
Haley House, Boston College is the center's location.

The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College (CRR) was established in 1998 as part of the Retirement Research Consortium (RRC).[3] In 2018, the CRR received renewed support from the U.S. Social Security Administration under the Retirement and Disability Research Consortium (RDRC).[4] The RDRC includes parallel centers at the National Bureau of Economic Research.,[5] the University of Michigan[6] and the University of Wisconsin–Madison.[7] The center is a non-profit research institute, affiliated with the Carroll School of Management at Boston College.[8] All of the CRR's research and publications are available to the public on its website.[9]

The center sponsors multiple research projects and disseminates the findings, trains new scholars, and provides access to data on retirement.[10][11][12][13][14]

Dissemination and publications

The Center distributes its research findings to an audience of government, corporate and labor leaders, the media, and the general public through a variety of publications.

  • Issues in Brief:[15] – analyses of topical issues.
  • Working Papers:[16] – in-depth review of research issues.
  • Special Projects:[17] – initiatives that go beyond the scope of the center's standard research studies. The most recent special projects include: Public Plans Data website,[18] the National Retirement Risk Index,[19] The Social Security Claiming Guide,[20] The Social Security Fix-It Book,[21] a broad assessment of "Work Opportunities for Older Americans,"[22] and the Financial Security Project.[23]

Education

The annual Steven H. Sandell grant program[24] and Dissertation Fellowship program[25] fund scholarships in the field of retirement and disability research. The programs are funded by the U.S. Social Security Administration to provide opportunities for scholars to pursue projects on retirement and disability issues.

Affiliated institutions

References

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