New York University

For The Census Annual Survey Of Manufacturers

  • Amount
    $52,481
  • Program
  • Date Awarded
    8/28/2017
  • Term
    12.0 Months
  • Type of Support
    Project
Overview
New York University Stern School of Business supports Professor Robert Seamans’ work on assessing the effect of robots on manufacturing firms, labor, and regional economies. The goal of this project is to study this effect by adding a question on robots to the Census’ Annual Survey of Manufacturers, which Professor Seamans anticipates will have an impact on future research and policy. This project directly contributes to efforts intended to gather more data on robots and other types of automation by collecting and analyzing data on robots, and by providing this data for other researchers to use for related projects.
About the Grantee
Grantee Website
www.nyu.edu 
Address
70 Washington Square South, New York, NY, 10012, United States
Grants to this Grantee
for the Tax Law Center  
Launched in January 2021, the Tax Law Center at the NYU School of Law seeks to build a stronger and more equitable tax system. Recently passed federal legislation leans heavily on tax policy to accelerate decarbonization. This grant will support the center’s efforts to inform tax policy in the public interest through rigorous, high-impact legal work. (Substrategy: U.S. National Policy)
for support of the Center for Social Media and Politics  
The Center for Social Media and Politics at New York University supports lab-based, interdisciplinary research in three core areas: (a) the relationship between social media and politics, with particular emphasis on the production, flow, and impact of information on social media; (b) innovative ways to use social media data to study politics; and (c) the development of open-source tools that facilitate the use of social media data for the study of politics. By disseminating the lab’s research to those outside the scholarly community — including the media, government, and civic and philanthropic organizations — the center will inform ongoing discussions about the effects of social media on democratic politics.
for the Initiative for Community Power at NYU School of Law  
The Initiative for Community Power at NYU is an ambitious, multifaceted project to catalyze understanding, innovation, high-impact work, and social change. The initiative combines scholarship, field-building, experiential education, academic convenings, internships, and fellowships to examine how inequality functions, is exacerbated, and can most effectively be disrupted — in our economy and democracy. The initiative is sponsored by the Center on Race, Inequality, and the Law at NYU School of Law and NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service.

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