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Cancelled - 13th Annual Huber Population Lecture featuring Dr. Steven Ruggles

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April 3, 2020
3:30PM - 5:00PM
The lecture will be held in 021 Lazenby Hall , with a reception to follow in IPR in Townshend Hall.

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Add to Calendar 2020-04-03 15:30:00 2020-04-03 17:00:00 Cancelled - 13th Annual Huber Population Lecture featuring Dr. Steven Ruggles Please join us on Friday, April 3, 2020 for the 13th Annual Huber Population Lecture. The guest speaker is Dr. Steven Ruggles, Regents Professor of History and Population Studies and Director, Institute for Social Research and Data at University of Minnesota.  Title of Talk: ‘It's None of Their Damn Business’: Privacy and Disclosure Control in the U.S. Census, 1790-2020 Steven Ruggles is Regents Professor of History and Population Studies at the University of Minnesota, and the Director of the Institute for Social Research and Data Innovation. He is best-known as the creator of IPUMS, the world’s largest population database. IPUMS provides information about two billion people residing in 107 countries between 1703 and 2018, including every respondent to the surviving U.S. censuses of 1790 to 1940. Ruggles has published extensively on historical demography, focusing especially on long-run changes in multigenerational families, single parenthood, divorce, and marriage, and on methods for population history. He has received the Sharlin Award (Social Science History Association), the Goode Award (American Sociological Association), the Lapham Award (Population Association of America), and the Miller Award (Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research). In 1995, he was named “King of Quant” by Wired Magazine; in 2014, he was named “Wonkblog-Certified Data Wizard” by the Washington Post Wonkblog. He has served as President of the Population Association of America (2015), the Association of Population Centers (2017-2018), and the Social Science History Association (2018-2019). He has been active on national advisory and study committees of the Census Bureau (CSAC), the National Science Foundation (SBE and ACCI), and the National Academy of Sciences (BRDI). Reception to follow lecture.  The lecture will be held in 021 Lazenby Hall , with a reception to follow in IPR in Townshend Hall. Institute for Population Research popcenter@osu.edu America/New_York public

Please join us on Friday, April 3, 2020 for the 13th Annual Huber Population Lecture. The guest speaker is Dr. Steven Ruggles, Regents Professor of History and Population Studies and
Director, Institute for Social Research and Data at University of Minnesota. 

Title of Talk: ‘It's None of Their Damn Business’: Privacy and Disclosure Control in the U.S. Census, 1790-2020

Steven Ruggles is Regents Professor of History and Population Studies at the University of Minnesota, and the Director of the Institute for Social Research and Data Innovation. He is best-known as the creator of IPUMS, the world’s largest population database. IPUMS provides information about two billion people residing in 107 countries between 1703 and 2018, including every respondent to the surviving U.S. censuses of 1790 to 1940. Ruggles has published extensively on historical demography, focusing especially on long-run changes in multigenerational families, single parenthood, divorce, and marriage, and on methods for population history. He has received the Sharlin Award (Social Science History Association), the Goode Award (American Sociological Association), the Lapham Award (Population Association of America), and the Miller Award (Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research). In 1995, he was named “King of Quant” by Wired Magazine; in 2014, he was named “Wonkblog-Certified Data Wizard” by the Washington Post Wonkblog. He has served as President of the Population Association of America (2015), the Association of Population Centers (2017-2018), and the Social Science History Association (2018-2019). He has been active on national advisory and study committees of the Census Bureau (CSAC), the National Science Foundation (SBE and ACCI), and the National Academy of Sciences (BRDI).

Reception to follow lecture.