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Full Description
With the growth of technological capabilities that allow government agencies to organize, link, and analyze a large amount of data across various sources, an important resource—administrative data—can be used to change the way that the United States designs and implements public policies.
This volume of The ANNALS outlines the infrastructures that will need to be built to make sure data providers and empirical researchers can best serve national policy needs. The volume is organized around three topics: privacy and confidentiality, data providers, and comprehensive strategies.
Contents
Introduction: Providing a Roadmap - Andrew Reamer and Julia Lane
The Federal Context - Nancy Potok
The State Context - Jeff Mayes
Section I: Privacy and Confidentiality
Privacy Protective Research: Facilitating Ethically Responsible Access to Administrative Data - Danny Goroff, Omer Tene, and Jules Polonetsky
Legal Issues in Using Administrative Data - John Petrila
Privacy and Security with Big Data - Simson Garfinkel
Research Infrastructure for the Safe Analysis of Sensitive Data - Ian Foster
Section II: Data Producers
Barriers to Accessing State Data and Approaches to Addressing Them - Bob Goerge
Data Sharing in the Federal Statistical System: Impediments and Possibilities - Amy O'Hara
Building the Data City of the Future - Beth Blauer
Using Data to Make More Rapid Progress in Addressing Difficult U.S. Social Problems - Jeff Liebman
Section III: Comprehensive Strategies
The UK Administrative Data Research Network: Its Genesis, Progress, and Plans For the Future - Peter Elias
From SkyServer to SciServer - Alex Szalay
Maximizing the Use of Integrated Data Systems to Serve State and Local Governments - Denis Culhane
Building an Infrastructure to Support the Use of Federal Administrative Data for Social Science Researchers - Julia Lane