AISP Toolkit Feb25 2025 - Flipbook - Page 11
As of January 2025, several longtime contributors to this work decided to remain
unnamed. We appreciate their contributions and regret the circumstances that
threatened their ability to contribute publicly.
WHO WE ARE
Indiana Management and Performance Hub: Josh Martin
Iowa State University, I2D2: Heather Rouse
Kentucky Center for Statistics: Matt Berry
Mecklenburg County (NC) Community Support Services: Mary Ann Priester
Metriarch: Jacqueline Blocker
MimiOnuoha.com: Mimi ỌNỤỌHA
Neighborhood Nexus:Nikolai Elneser & Tommy Pearce
Northside Achievement Zone: Amy Susman-Stillman
Open Data Charter: Cat Cortes
Philadelphia Monument Lab: Paul Farber
Seattle Information Technology Department: Jim Loter
State of Connecticut, O昀케ce of Health Strategy: Sumit Sajnani
State of Oregon, Oregon Health Authority, Oregon Behavioral Health Survey: Renee Boyd &
Kusuma Madamala
The Folded Map Project: Tonika Lewis Johnson
UNC Chapel Hill, School of Information and Library Science & NC Data Works: Alex Chassanoff
University of Arizona:Jason Jurjevich
University of California-Los Angeles, California Policy Lab: Janey Rountree
University of Massachusetts-Amherst, School of Public Health and Health Sciences: Daniel Lopez-Cevallos
University of Michigan, Population Studies Center: Jordan Papp & Chandler Rombes
Western Pennsylvania Regional Data Center: Robert Gradeck & David Walker
University of Southern California, Children’s Data Network: Regan Foust
Urban Institute: Claire Bowen, Leah Hendey, Gabe Morrison, Madeline Pickens, & Alena Stern
Wilder Research: Jessie Austin O’Neill, Briellen Gri昀케n, Nicole MartinRogers, & Piere Washington
Acknowledgments
The authors wish to express their gratitude to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and
the Ford Foundation, as well as the other funders who supported this work. The conclusions
contained within are those of the authors and do not necessarily re昀氀ect positions or policies of
the funders.
We are grateful to the 2023-2024 students of the University of Pennsylvania’s School of
Social Policy & Practice course, Applied Data Ethics, Law, & the Social Good, who provided
valuable critique and suggested updates, including Ryann Carey for her work sourcing Work
in Action. We are also grateful to Gilly Gehri for their leadership in framing the Algorithms &
Arti昀椀cial Intelligence section as a part of an independent study with AISP on this topic. We
also recognize Briellen Gri昀케n, who provided an external review of this Toolkit.
Finally, we'd like to thank our 2020 AISP Contributors, Workgroup Contributors, and Work in
Action Contributors who supported this work in 2019 and 2020 (names below).
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