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What Does "MDRC" Stand For?

In 1974, MDRC was founded as the Manpower Demonstration Research Corporation. However, in 2003, we made "MDRC" the registered corporate identity of our organization, thereby formally adopting the name by which we had become best known to our professional colleagues and the general public.


What Is MDRC?
Too often, public policies that profoundly affect the lives of low-income families are shaped by hunches, anecdotes, and untested assumptions. Ineffective policies waste precious resources and feed public cynicism about government. Most important, such policies may hinder the very people they are designed to help. MDRC was created to learn what works in social policy — and to make sure that the evidence we produce informs the design and implementation of policies and programs.

Created in 1974 by the Ford Foundation and a group of federal agencies, MDRC is best known for mounting large-scale evaluations of real-world policies and programs targeted to low-income people. We helped pioneer the use of random assignment — the same highly reliable methodology that is used to test new medicines — in the evaluation of such policies and programs. In some cases, we work with others to design pathbreaking initiatives and then subject those initiatives to rigorous testing. In other cases, we conduct careful evaluations of programs designed and operated by government agencies or others.

Over the years, MDRC has brought its unique approach to an ever-growing range of policy areas and target populations. Once known primarily for evaluations of state welfare-to-work programs, today MDRC is also studying public school reforms, employment programs for ex-prisoners and people with disabilities, and programs to help low-income people succeed in college. We have worked in nearly every state and most major cities; we also helped create a sister organization in Canada and are currently managing a large project in the United Kingdom with British partners. The five main policy areas in which we work, illustrate the breadth and diversity of our current projects. Those areas include:
  • Promoting Family Well-Being and Child Development


  • Improving Public Education


  • Promoting Successful Transitions to Adulthood


  • Supporting Low-Wage Workers and Communities


  • Overcoming Barriers to Employment
Working in fields where emotion and ideology often dominate public debates, MDRC is seen as a source of objective, unbiased evidence. From welfare policy to high school reform, MDRC’s research has frequently helped to shape legislation, program design, and operational practices across the country.
 




Our Mission

MDRC is dedicated to learning what works to improve the well-being of low-income people. Through our research and the active communication of our findings, we seek to enhance the effectiveness of social policies and programs.
Corporate Report

"Sometimes we are privileged to be part of something that succeeds beyond our wildest dreams. MDRC, a widely respected and effective social policy research organization, is one of these special success stories."

Susan Berresford

President,
Ford Foundation,
1996-2007


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