Julia Ingrid Lane

New York University

Julia is a Professor Emerita at New York University’s NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. She is known for creating or co-founding a number of public data infrastructures. She initiated and co-founded the Census Bureau’s Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics program, as well as the STAR METRICS/UMETRICS program at the Institute for Research on Innovation and Science , Statistics New Zealand’s Integrated Data Infrastructure, USPTO’s Patentsview. She founded the not for profit company, the Coleridge Initiative. She also has created data access infrastructures: the Remote Data Access Enclave at NORC at the University of Chicago, the Administrative Data Research Facility at NYU and then the Coleridge Initiative. She developed the Applied Data Analytics training program at the Coleridge Initiative and the Executive Certificate in Data Literacy and Evidence Building at NYU and the University of Maryland. She is currently working with a number of scientific and statistical agencies on the Democratizing Data project. She has authored over 80 scientific publications, edited or coauthored 13 books, and received over $180 million in grants and contracts from national and international agencies and foundations.

Public Service

Julia was a senior advisor in the Office of the Federal CIO at the White House, supporting the implementation of the Federal Data Strategy. She recently served on the Advisory Committee on Data for Evidence Building and the National AI Research Resources Task Force. Julia currently serves on the Secretary of Labor’s Workforce Innovation Advisory Committee and the National Science Foundation’s Advisory Committee on Cyberinfrastructure.

She holds a PhD in Economics and an MA in Statistics.

Awards

Julia is an elected fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the International Statistical Institute and the American Statistical Association. She is the recipient of the 2004 Vladimir Chavrid award from the National Association of State Workforce Agencies as well the 2014 Julius Shiskin award and the 2014 Roger Herriot award from the American Statistical Association and the 2019 LEHD Founders award from the Census Bureau for establishing the LEHD program. She is also the recipient of the 2017 Warren E. Miller Award and the 2019 Distinguished Fellow award from the New Zealand Association of Economists.