Showing posts with label USDA-ERS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USDA-ERS. Show all posts

Monday, January 8, 2024

Call for Proposals USDA-Economic Research Service RIDGE Program

USDA, Economic Research Service (ERS) encourages new and innovative research through joint projects with both USDA, ERS staff and outside researchers. The USDA, ERS extramural research program promotes food and nutrition assistance research from a broad arena:

Research Innovation and Development Grants in Economics Program (RIDGE)

Research Innovation and Development Grants in Economics Program (RIDGE)

The RIDGE Program encourages new and innovative research on food and nutrition assistance issues and broadens the participation of social science scholars in such research. RIDGE is funded by USDA, ERS and USDA, Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) and is administered in partnership with public or private institutions of higher education.

Request for Proposals (RFP) for RIDGE Grants

The USDA, ERS and RIDGE Partnership are pleased to invite proposals for new research, as part of the RIDGE Partnership 2024 grant cycle. Proposals are due January 31, 2024. Detailed information is provided on the RIDGE Partnership website, including a Request for Proposals document that provides an overview, describes the topic areas, explains the submission process, provides the detailed evaluation criteria, and summarizes key dates.

RIDGE Partnership Award

USDA, ERS—in collaboration with USDA, FNS—invited applications from university-based institutions for a competitive cooperative agreement award to establish a RIDGE Partnership for Food and Nutrition Assistance Research in 2022.

The new RIDGE partnership was awarded to Tufts University, the University of Connecticut (UConn), and the University of Missouri on September 16, 2022. Funding for a second round of research grants was provided to the RIDGE Partnership in 2023, to be awarded in 2024.

For more information, please contact Alana Rhone.

2023 Grant Awards

The 2023 round funded eight research grants to enhance food security and dietary quality in Federal nutrition assistance programs in 2023. Using a wide variety of data sources—including surveys, administrative data, and qualitative methods—these research projects informed the public on programs that provided nutrition assistance to people of all ages across the United States. More information is available on the RIDGE Partnership website.

The previous RIDGE program issued a request for proposals in December 2022. Applicants submitted short concept letters on food and nutrition assistance issues in which applicants would like to conduct research. The selected applicants were invited to submit full proposals. All full proposals were reviewed by external reviewers, USDA reviewers, and by the program directors at the University of Connecticut, Tufts University, and the University of Missouri. Using recommendations from the RIDGE partnership, the award decision was made by USDA, ERS and USDA, FNS and announced in March 2023.

The Tufts/UConn/University of Missouri RIDGE partnership oversaw the application, peer review, award, and performance processes of the research grants provided through the RIDGE Program. The Tufts/UConn/University of Missouri partnership served as a hub for mentoring and training researchers interested in food and nutrition assistance issues and provided a source of timely and accessible information on research findings. The Tufts/UConn/University of Missouri partnership sought applicants from a diverse community of experienced nutrition assistance researchers, graduate students, early career scholars, and established researchers who brought expertise in another research area.

Conferences

USDA, ERS and its partner institutions host the Food and Nutrition Assistance RIDGE Program Conference, at which RIDGE researchers present findings of completed projects. The last RIDGE Conference was held on October 14, 2020. For information about this most recent conference, see the 2020 Research Innovation and Development Grants in Economics Program (RIDGE) Conference.

The next RIDGE conference will be held in the Fall of 2024. Details about this 2024 conference will be announced here when they are available.

Research Project Summaries

RIDGE, known as the Small Grants Program until 2006, has funded more than 280 completed projects at more than 100 educational and research institutions from 1998 to 2019.

Previous RIDGE partners include: Tufts University/University of Connecticut (UConn); the Institute for Research on Poverty (IRP), University of Wisconsin-Madison; the Center for Regional Development, Purdue University; the Southern Rural Development Center, Mississippi State University; the American Indian Studies Program, University of Arizona; the Harris School of Public Policy, University of Chicago; the Joint Center for Poverty Research, University of Chicago and Northwestern University; and the Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis.

The RIDGE Program regularly summarizes research findings of projects that were awarded grants through its partner institutions. The summaries are available in a searchable electronic database. To perform a customized search of all RIDGE project summaries (by keyword(s), project, research center, investigator, title, or year), see:

RIDGE Projects and Summaries

Last updated: Monday, December 11, 2023

For more information, contact: Alana Rhone

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Virtual ERS & NIFA Career Opportunities Expo



USDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS) and National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) are looking for qualified candidates for multiple positions in the Kansas City area. Join a Virtual ERS & NIFA Career Opportunities Expo on April 28 to learn more about the agencies and opportunities available. Breakout sessions to learn about specific positions will also be held throughout the week. See attached for more information and visit https://workforusdakc.com/ to register and learn more.

Tuesday, September 18, 2018

FREE Webinar on USDA Research Relocation and Reorganization

USDA Research Relocation and Reorganization:
Perspectives from Former USDA Chief Scientists and Administrators

Thursday, September 20, 2018
11 a.m. – 12 p.m. EDT

A FREE webinar featuring:
Catherine Woteki
Catherine Woteki
Former USDA Under Secretary of
Agriculture for Research, Education,
and Economics
Susan Offutt
Susan Offutt
Former USDA Economic Research Service Administrator
 
Gale Buchanan
Gale Buchanan
Former USDA Under Secretary of
Agriculture for Research, Education,
and Economics
Scott Swinton
Scott Swinton (moderator)
Professor, Michigan State University
Past President, Agricultural

and Applied Economics Association

On August 9, US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Sonny Perdue surprised Congress and USDA stakeholders with an announcement that he plans to relocate the USDA Economic Research Service (ERS) and USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) outside the Washington, DC, area by the end of 2019. He also will transfer ERS from the USDA research arm to a policy arm.
The announcement has raised the following questions of process:
  • Was the partner and stakeholder community consulted prior to the announcement, and if so, how and when?
  • Will there be a chance for the USDA partner community to comment on the announcement and the effects of its realization?
  • What is Congress’s oversight and appropriation role in this reorganization?
Many substantive concerns have also been raised, including the following:
  • What policy and research problems are being addressed by the relocations and ERS’ transfer to a USDA policy arm?
  • How will the research quality and relevance of NIFA and ERS be improved by moving their headquarters away from key audiences and policymakers?
  • How would NIFA’s role in federal research partnerships be affected with a move away from sister federal agencies (National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation, and Department of Energy)?
  • How would NIFA’s day-to-day operations be affected with leadership in DC and the rest of the agency in another location?
  • If most of NIFA is relocated to a partner university, what protections would be necessary to avoid preferential treatment of that university over the dozens of other universities that host NIFA-funded research?
  • Will ERS retain its capacity to be a leading world agricultural economics research institution if many staff elect not to relocate?
  • After reorganization, will the ERS have the resources to continue to serve as an independent, trustworthy source of statistical information?
  • What do these changes mean for the future of the USDA mission area of Research, Education, and Economics?
The panelists will address the many questions and concerns raised about Perdue’s announcement; address viewer questions; and suggest actions for Congress, USDA, and viewers.
To view the webinar, please register here. A recording of the webinar will also be posted here afterward.
Follow the discussion on Twitter by using #NIFA-ERS-Webinar.
Further Reading

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Webinar - Rural Manufacturing Resilience: Factors Associated with Plant Survival

Manufacturing provides jobs and income that individuals, families, and communities in rural areas rely upon. In a recently released ERS report, Rural Manufacturing Resilience: Factors Associated with Plant Survival, 1996-2011, ERS Economist Sarah A. Low examines rural manufacturing plant survival during a 15-year period that includes two recessions and a longstanding decline in manufacturing employment. In the report, Low links an in-depth ERS survey to quarterly administrative employment records so that the relationship between plant- and community-level factors and survival can be examined. In this webinar, Low will summarize findings from the ERS report while also explaining the data and modeling technique used in the analysis.

Details


Date:
Tue, May 23
Time:
01:00 PM EDT
Duration:
1 hour
Host(s):
ERS Economist Sarah A. Low
 

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Webinar: America's Diverse Family Farms: 2016 Edition


Farming is still an industry of family businesses. Ninety-nine percent of farms are family farms, and they account for 89 percent of farm production. Small farms make up 90 percent of the farm count and operate 48 percent of the Nation's farmland. The largest share of farm production, however, occurs on large-scale family farms. In this webinar, ERS Economist Robert Hoppe will present findings from America's Diverse Family Farms: 2016 Edition, a brochure that describes in detail the different types of farms in the United States.


https://cc.readytalk.com/r/e5twzjmf61ci&eom 

Date:
Wed, Feb 15, 2017
Time:
01:00 PM EST
Duration:
1 hour
Host(s):
Robert Hoppe