Professor
University of Illinois Urbana Champaign
Urbana, Illinois, United States
Dr. Wu’s research and practice interests include poverty, social welfare policy, the impact of welfare reform on low-income families, access to public benefits and support services for low-income families, and program evaluation. She has focused her research agenda on three distinct yet interrelated topics: (1) the effects of financial sanctions on the well-being of welfare participants; (2) access to public benefits and related supports for low-income families; and (3) the long-term employment and earnings trajectories of at-risk families.
Her overarching interest is in assessing the effectiveness of different strategies for promoting economic advancement. Her research has made contributions in identifying the dynamics and effects of welfare sanctions, and in understanding whether and how public and private assistance helps low-income families meet their basic needs. Her research has also contributed to our understanding of the mechanisms and pathways to employment and earnings success, and to developing a conceptual approach to categorizing employment and earnings trajectories among low-income families. She has extensive experience analyzing complex, longitudinal, state administrative data and national, population-based data using sophisticated statistical methods. Dr. Wu is currently working on research projects on unemployment and underemployment. She is examining differences in employment problems, poverty status, and receipt of public and private assistance in low-income, single mother families in periods before, during, and after an economic downturn.
Disclosure information not submitted.
Saturday, October 26, 2024
10:30 AM – 11:30 AM CT