The West Coast Poverty Center (WCPC) at the University of Washington (UW) serves as a hub for research, education, and policy analysis leading to greater understanding of the causes and consequences of poverty and effective approaches to reducing it in the west coast states. WCPC was founded in 2005 with initial core funding from the University of Washington and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (OASPE).
A collaborative venture of the UW School of Social Work, the Daniel J. Evans School of Public Affairs, and the College of Arts and Sciences, the West Coast Poverty Center creates new opportunities for cross-disciplinary exchanges and collaboration among poverty researchers and fosters a network of poverty scholars in the west coast region. At the UW, the Center mentors the next generation of poverty scholars and practitioners through faculty awards, research assistantships and dissertation fellowships for graduate students, and graduate programs of study. Beyond the university, the Poverty Center works to bring poverty-relevant knowledge to policymakers and practitioners and to engage researchers and policy practitioners in dialogue through outreach, communications, and events.
An interdisciplinary group of Faculty Affiliates of the Poverty Center hold teaching appointments at the University of Washington. The Center is governed by a group of Faculty Affiliates at UW who constitute an executive committee and by an external Advisory Board.
West Coast Poverty Center activities include:
Academic conferences:"Old Assumptions, New Realities: Economic Security for Working Families in the 21st Century" (2008); Local Contexts and the Prospects for the Second Generation" (2006)
Poverty and Policy Small Grants for scholars studying poverty and policy issues on the West Coast and nationally
Seminar Series on Poverty and Policy for faculty and graduate students
DIALOGUES on Research and Policy Projects generating new research on poverty and promoting dialogue between researchers and policymakers on the findings
Mentoring
Emerging Poverty Scholars awards for junior faculty at UW
Dissertation Fellowships for UW doctoral candidates completing dissertations on poverty and policy topics
Doctoral courses to provide training, mentorship and professional development opportunities for Ph.D. students pursuing studies relating to poverty and policy
Outreach and Communications
Poverty research dissemination through the West Coast Poverty Center's Poverty Research Flash series and other products, available both online and in print
Communications and events to increase awareness and understanding of poverty issues and to bring poverty researchers together with policy practitioners, journalists, and the public
Resources for the media, including a listing of Experts on Poverty who can provide issue-specific background on current poverty concerns