2025 SHECP Internship Academy – General Sessions
- SHECP
- Apr 9
- 2 min read
This June, SHECP will kick-off our summer programming with the week-long SHECP Internship Academy, including two sessions that will be open to the general public.

On June 4th, Dr. Greg Duncan will give the keynote address, "Reducing Intergenerational Poverty," and provide an overview of the research and findings in the National Academies' 2024 Reducing Intergenerational Poverty Consensus Study Report. "The report examines the drivers of long-term, intergenerational poverty, identifies potential policies and programs to reduce it, and recommends actions to address gaps in data and research." (nationalacademies.org) Register today>>
The full SHECP Internship Academy will run from June 2nd to June 5th, and will serve to provide additional preparations for interns to responsibly engage with host communities and frame the upcoming internship within the larger academic context.

Keynote Address – Dr. Greg Duncan
"Reducing Intergenerational Poverty"
Wednesday, June 4th at 12:00 PM ET
Dr. Greg Duncan is Distinguished Professor in the Department of Education at the University of California, Irvine. With a 1974 Ph.D. in Economics, Duncan spent the first two decades of his career at the University of Michigan working on, and ultimately directing, the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) data collection project, which, in 2001, was named by the National Science Foundation to be one of the 50 most significant NSF-funded projects in the organization’s history. Beginning in the late 1980s, Duncan engaged in a number of interdisciplinary research networks and began to focus on the impacts of family and neighborhood conditions on children’s cognitive and behavioral development. During his 1995-2008 tenure at Northwestern University, he was the Edwina S. Tarry Professor in the School of Education and Social Policy. He co-edited Neighborhood Poverty (1997), Consequences of Growing Up Poor (1997) and For Better and for Worse: Welfare Reform and the Well-Being of Children and Families (2001) and coauthored Higher Ground: New Hope for the Working Poor and Their Children (2007). Duncan was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2001 and the National Academy of Sciences in 2010. He was President of the Midwest Economics Association in 2004, the Population Association of America in 2008 and the Society for Research in Child Development (2009-11). http://www.gse.uci.edu Full bio • Website
Workshop
Details Coming Soon
Contact info@shepherdconsortium.org if you have any questions or would like further information.
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