Census
Bureau Research Data Center
Research
Proposal Guidelines
People wishing to conduct research at a Census Bureau Research
Data Center (RDC) must submit a research proposal using the Census
Bureau's Center for Economic Studies (CES) website
(www.ces.census.gov).
The following guidelines describe the research proposal submission
and review process. This is the only procedure that can be employed
to submit a research proposal.
Research Proposal Guidelines (PDF - 156kb)
Writing Benefit Statements For Projects Accessing Confidential Data (PDF - 71kb)
IRS Criteria Document (PDF - 26kb)
The Proposal Process
Preliminary Proposal Development
Researchers who wish to develop a proposal to conduct
research at a Census Bureau RDC should first contact the RDC
administrator at the primary center where the research will be
carried out. The researcher should discuss the proposed project with
the administrator to determine whether the research fits with the
Census Bureau's mandate, is feasible, and is likely to provide
benefits to Census Bureau programs under Title 13 of the U.S. Code
(this is required by law).
The first step in the proposal
process is for the researcher to register as a user with CES by
opening an account through the CES website. Once an account has been
created, the user receives a system-generated email message
containing an initial password. The user can change this password at
the first login session. All researchers must have a user account in
order to submit preliminary and final proposals to CES.
Working
closely with the RDC administrator, researchers develop a preliminary
research proposal that includes a list of expected researchers on the
project, the primary site where the research will be carried out, the
purpose of the research, its funding source, requested datasets,
desired software, a brief narrative description of the research
project and proposed benefits to the Census Bureau.
Once a
preliminary proposal has been submitted, the RDC administrator
reviews it and advises the researcher of any suggestions for
improvement or refinement. The administrator must approve the
preliminary proposal before the researcher can submit a final
proposal to CES.
Both CES and the RDCs entertain proposals
from doctoral students who seek access to confidential data for
dissertation research. Proposals that list dissertation research as
the motivation must include the student’s primary adviser as a
co-principal investigator. CES recommends that the adviser also apply
for Special Sworn Status (see below) if he or she expects to view any
intermediate output.
Final Proposal Submission
Researchers should consult with the RDC administrator about
the content and form of a final research proposal before submitting
the proposal through the CES on-line management system. The final
proposal consists of three separate documents in Adobe Acrobat
Portable Document Format (PDF): (1) Abstract of the proposal; (2)
Project description (full proposal); and (3) Statement of benefits to
the Census Bureau in the from of a Predominant Purpose Statement
(PPS). Failure on the part of researchers to consult fully with the
RDC administrator before submission of proposal files can result in a
decision by CES to decline to review the proposal.
The three
document files should conform to the following requirements:
Proposal Abstract. This document should be no longer that one single-spaced page or two double-spaced pages and it should capture the essence of the project proposal. The proposal should be aimed at a competent social scientist who is not necessarily a specialist in the field or on the topic within the field. The data sets, and years of data, that will be used must be stated. Within the abstract, one or two sentences should succinctly state what the project would do and the data it will use. The abstract must also address the proposed benefits to the Census Bureau. The abstract must include, at the top of the first page, a project title and the names of all researchers.
Project Description (full proposal). This document should describe in as much detail as possible:
The nature of the research question(s),
Description of the methodology (including models to be estimated, how model variables will be measured and hypotheses to be tested),
Census Bureau and non-Census Bureau data sets to be used,
Expected outcomes,
A detailed description of the nature and amount of output to be submitted for disclosure avoidance review and ultimate release and,
Should contain a list of references cited.
The proposal should:
Be limited to no more than fifteen (15) single-spaced pages or thirty (30) double-spaced pages (inclusive of references).
Contain a title and the names of all researchers at the top of the first page.
Include appropriate headings and subheadings throughout the document to assist reviewers in following the proposal narrative.
Use a font size of at least 11 point and should have at least one-half inch margins all around. Twelve point font and one-inch margins are preferred.
Number all pages.
Contain a separate section identifying all data sets, Census Bureau and other, the project will use. Public-use Census Bureau data that will be used in the project must be included in this section. Years of data needed must also be stated. If the project would make links among data sets, the links must be indicated, and the method for making the links must be specified.
Contain a separate section stating the proposed duration of the project in absolute amounts of time (e.g. 14 months) and a desired starting date. This section should also state the intensity of RDC lab use (e.g. 15 hours per week).
Not include a separate title page, which will be counted against the page limit.
Not include any appendices unless approved in advance by the RDC administrator. Unapproved additional pages will count against the page limit, and may be sufficient cause for CES to decline to review the proposal.
Benefits Statement. This document should be in the form of a Predominant Purpose Statement. It has no length limitation, although brevity and concise presentation are encouraged. The statement should address clearly how the project would provide one or more of the Title 13 benefits listed below.
Writing Benefit Statements For Projects Accessing Confidential Data (PDF - 71kb)Researchers must submit all proposal related documents through the CES website. Experience shows that PDF files can take several minutes to upload successfully to the proposal management system. The person uploading the files should wait until he or she receives a message that the upload process has completed successfully before exiting the management system and closing her or his web browser.
Proposal Review Process
Research proposals submitted to CES are reviewed and judged against five major standards:
Benefit to Census Bureau programs. Proposals must demonstrate that the research is likely to provide benefits to data programs the Census Bureau conducts under Title 13 U.S. Code. The Census Bureau developed the 13 criteria below for assessing this potential. Researchers must consult with an RDC administrator to determine whether the data they propose to use contains Federal Tax Information (FTI). All business data and some kinds of household data contain FTI. Projects using FTI must demonstrate that the project’s predominant purpose is to benefit Census Bureau programs by meeting at least one of criteria 5 through 13 below, which are the same criteria as listed in the Criteria Document of September 15, 2000. Projects using data that have no FTI must show that the project will provide benefits under one or more of criteria 1 through 13.
Evaluating concepts and practices underlying Census Bureau statistical data collection and dissemination practices, including consideration of continued relevance and appropriateness of past Census Bureau procedures to changing economic and social circumstances;
Analyzing demographic and social or economic processes that affect Census Bureau programs, especially those that evaluate or hold promise of improving the quality of products issued by the Census Bureau;
Developing means of increasing the utility of Census Bureau data for analyzing public programs, public policy, and/or demographic, economic, or social conditions; and
Conducting or facilitating census and survey data collection, processing or dissemination, including through activities such as administrative support, information technology support, program oversight, or auditing under appropriate legal authority.
Understanding and/or improving the quality of data produced through a Title 13, Chapter 5 survey, census, or estimate;
Leading to new or improved methodology to collect, measure, or tabulate a Title 13, Chapter 5 survey, census, or estimate;
Enhancing the data collected in a Title 13, Chapter 5 survey or census. For example: improving imputations for non-response; developing links across time or entities for data gathered in censuses and surveys authorized by Title 13, Chapter 5;
Identifying the limitations of, or improving, the underlying Business Register, Master Address File, and industrial and geographical classification schemes used to collect the data;
Identifying shortcomings of current data, collection programs and/or documenting new data collection needs;
Constructing, verifying, or improving the sampling frame for a census or survey authorized under Title 13, Chapter;
Preparing estimates of population and characteristics of population as authorized under Title 13, Chapter 5;
Developing a methodology for estimating non-response to a census or survey authorized under Title 13, Chapter 5;
Developing statistical weights for a survey authorized under Title 13, Chapter 5.
Scientific merit. This standard relates to the project’s methodological soundness and likelihood of contributing to existing knowledge. In order to benefit the Census Bureau, researchers must demonstrate that their project will use appropriate existing or innovative methods competently to address important questions using Census Bureau data. Evidence of a funding award from an organization using a competitive peer review process (e.g., the National Science Foundation or the National Institutes of Health) is sufficient to demonstrate a proposal’s scientific merit. The Center for Economic studies typically solicits reviews of scientific merit from experts both inside and outside the Census Bureau.
Clear need for non-public data. The proposal should demonstrate the need for and importance of non-public data. The proposal should explain why publicly available data sources are not sufficient to meet the proposal’s objectives.
Feasibility. The proposal must show that the research can be conducted successfully with the methodology and requested data.
Risk of disclosure. Output from all research projects must undergo and pass disclosure review.
Tabular and graphical output presents a higher risk to disclosure of confidential information than do coefficients from statistical models.
The Census Bureau is required by law to protect the confidentiality of data collected under its authorizing legislation, Title 13, U.S. Code.
Some data files are collected under the sponsorship of other agencies. In providing restricted access to these data CES must adhere to all applicable laws and regulations.
Researchers may be required to sign non-disclosure documents of survey sponsors or other agencies that provide data for their research projects.
Both Census Bureau and external
experts on subject matter, datasets, and disclosure risk review all
proposals. Relevant data sponsors and data custodians also review
proposals that request certain datasets. In addition, all proposals
undergo a review by the Census Bureau’s Policy Office for
compliance with the Census Bureau’s policies. Proposals that are
deemed to pose a potential risk to the confidentiality of
respondent-supplied information, or that do not clearly fall within
existing Census Bureau policy guidelines, may be referred to the Data
Stewardship Executive Policy Committee for additional review.
The
Center for Economic Studies accepts proposals for review at any time
during the year. Reviewed proposals receive one of two ratings:
Approved. The proposal successfully addresses all of the review criteria mentioned above.
Not Approved. The proposal fails to meet one or more review criteria, and may be resubmitted as a new preliminary proposal only after suitable revision and approval by the RDC administrator.
The Project Review Coordinator communicates the outcome of the
review process to the contact researcher, which includes a review
synopsis, an explanation for the decision, and copies of the expert
reviews.
After receiving Census Bureau approval, any
proposals seeking to use datasets that contain Federal Tax
Information (FTI) must also be reviewed for approval by the Internal
Revenue Service to ensure that the predominant purpose of the
research is to contribute to Census Bureau programs under Title 13,
Chapter 5 of the U.S. Code (See the IRS Criteria Document and above
for a list and description of approved Title 13 benefits).
Researchers must consult the relevant RDC administrator to determine
whether their proposal would use data that contain FTI. The review
process is both lengthy and rigorous requiring that researchers
exhibit patience throughout. Failure on the part of researchers to
consult fully with the RDC administrator on this point before
submission of proposal files may result in a decision by CES to
decline to review the proposal. Projects that seek Federal Tax
Information (FTI) normally require an additional two to three months
to gain final approval. No proposal will gain approval from both
Census and the IRS if its predominant purpose is not to deliver Title
13 benefits.
Post Approval Process
Approval of
research proposals by CES, and the IRS if FTI is requested, is merely
the first step in a multi-step process before research can actually
commence. In many instances, CES must obtain permissions to access
certain data from the survey sponsors, data custodians, or the Census
Bureau program areas that control such access. This process can range
from a few weeks to many months depending upon the nature and status
of data sharing agreements between the Census Bureau and sponsoring
agencies, whether Federal or State.
Once a project has been
approved, all researchers who expect to access confidential data must
undergo a background investigation, including fingerprinting. After
completion of the background check, the Census Bureau grants Special
Sworn Status (SSS) to each researcher, which subjects him or her to
incarceration of up to five years and/or fines of up to $250,000 if
he or she knowingly or inadvertently disclose confidential
information on individuals, households, or businesses. All SSS
individuals must take annual training in the use and protection of
Title 13 data, and of Title 26 data if FTI are to be used in the
project. RDC administrators deliver this training.
All
researchers on the project must register with CES by opening a user
account through the Center’s website.
All approved research
projects are governed by a written agreement between the
researcher(s) and the Census Bureau. The agreement stipulates the
start and end dates for the project, responsibilities of both parties
with respect to procedures and practices, and if the research project
is conducted at the CES RDC, fee payment. All researchers on the
project must sign this agreement with the Census Bureau, or if added
to the project after the agreement is signed, an addendum to the
agreement. If the research project is conducted at an RDC partner
institution, an agreement with the RDC partner institution may be
required as well
CES encourages researchers to assess
carefully the time period over which they request access and to make
efficient use of their lab time, but also to anticipate that
disclosure review may require modification to computer output before
it can be released. Requests for time extensions beyond the agreement
end date undergo careful evaluation and rarely gain approval. Access
to confidential data and facilities associated with a given research
project will end at midnight on the official end date of the research
project. These dates must be consistent with the dates specified in
the approved proposal.
Timing
Researchers
should expect a minimum of three months to elapse between the final
proposal submission and the actual commencement of research. This
duration can vary greatly by individual proposal depending upon data
permissions required, IRS review, background checks, software and
datasets requested, and the number of proposals under consideration.
Researchers can help speed up the process by the following:
Adhere closely to all practices and procedures for proposal submission as given on the CES website.
Work closely with their RDC administrator on proposal development and on any requested revisions or clarifications to proposals or predominant purpose statements.
Provide CES with the terms of use for any datasets they wish to bring to the lab.
Process their Special Sworn Status (SSS) paperwork quickly.
Post Project Certification
Within six months of
the end date of a research project the researcher(s) will submit to
CES a Post Project Certification document (PPC) that describes
whether and how the Chapter 5, Title 13 benefits outlined in the
project’s approved Predominant Purpose Statement (PPS) were
achieved.
Cost
There are substantial financial
costs involved in supporting research at RDCs. To recover those
costs, CES or the RDC partner institution may impose user fees. The
RDC Administrator should be contacted for further information on the
fee. There are also special arrangements available for organizations
that wish to sponsor a number of research projects over an extended
period of time. In certain circumstances, the standard fees may be
adjusted. For example, there may be additional costs for special data
processing needed to make new datasets available, or for linking
datasets.