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This brief from the Next Steps for Rigorous Research on Two-Generation Approaches (NS2G) project describes the components of a two-generation logic model and the process for developing one.

This brief provides guidance for employment service providers and other human services agency staff who wish to implement evidence-based programs but find little information about the core components of those programs.

This brief describes insights and lessons learned by the HPOG team while creating and operating PAGES and provides federal agencies and other organizations with recommendations for implementing data systems that support federally funded time-limited grants, demonstration projects, and evaluations similar to HPOG 2.0.

The Supporting Family Economic Well-Being Through Home Visiting (HomeEc) project seeks nominations of practices — that is, services, strategies, or activities — to support family economic well-being.

This report uses information from the Health Profession Opportunity Grants (HPOG) Program to examine the individual characteristics and program activities associated with who does or does not start and complete healthcare training.

This document reports on the impacts of the Health Profession Opportunity Grants (HPOG 1.0) Program that arose after about six years.

This brief focuses on employer-based work-family interventions intended to reduce the inherent conflict many employees face in managing work and life demands and also identifies pathways for further research and evaluation.

This expansive toolkit provides guidance, real world examples, and resources to help TANF and child support programs engage the families they serve in improving service delivery, policy, and program operations.

This brief highlights the study’s findings related to TANF programs in rural contexts, drawing on our analysis of TANF administrative data and secondary survey sources alongside interviews with human service providers across rural communities.

While significant research has come forward to improve our collective understanding of human services programs and their contribution to the economic and social well-being of individuals and families, notable knowledge gaps continue to persist regarding how these programs can best serve the needs and interests of rural communities.