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The Association for the Study of African American Life and History
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Page revised 7/8/2010
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Founders of Black History Month
THURSDAY LUNCHEON
Speaker: Margaret Sims
Director,
Urban Institute's
Low Income Working Families Project
95th Annual ASALH Convention
2010 Black History Theme:
The History of Black Economic Empowerment

Raleigh, NC
September 29 - October 3, 2010
Margaret C. Simms is an Institute fellow at the Urban Institute and director of the
Institute's Low-Income Working Families project
, a research initiative exploring
challenges faced by 9 million families and their 19 million children.

A nationally recognized expert on the economic well-being of African Americans,  
Simms spent 21 years with the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in a
number of leadership positions. Most recently, she was appointed vice president for
governance and economic analysis in 2005 and served as interim president from May
to December 2006. She began working at the Joint Center, one of the nation's premier
think tanks dealing with public-policy issues of concern to African Americans and other
communities of color, in 1986 as deputy director of research.

Simms, who earned a master's degree and doctorate in economics at Stanford
University, was a senior research associate at the Urban Institute from 1979 to 1986
and directed the Institute's Minorities and Social Policy Program from 1981 to 1986.

She was a faculty member at Atlanta University from 1972 to 1981, teaching first in the
School of Business Administration and then serving as chair of the economics
department. She also taught at Clark College (Atlanta) and the University of California
at Santa Cruz. In 1977 and 1978, she was a Brookings economic policy fellow at the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Simms has also edited many books and monographs, including Job Creation
Prospects and Strategies (with Wilhelmina Leigh), Economic Perspectives on
Affirmative Action, and Slipping Through the Cracks: The Status of Black Women (with
Julianne Malveaux). She was editor of the Review of Black Political Economy from
1983 to 1988 and board chair of the Institute for Women's Policy Research from 1993
to 1998. She has been a member of Black Enterprise magazine's board of economists
since 1987 and is the incoming president of the National Academy of Social Insurance.
She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2005.