Treasury Wellbeing Report virtual seminar series
Date and time
Location
Online event
Anita Chandra of RAND Social and Economic Well-Being: Considerations for Building Resilience and Advancing Well-Being at the Community Level
About this event
Kia ora koutou katoa,
At Te Tai Ōhanga – The Treasury, we are developing the first Wellbeing Report - Te Tai Waiora that will be published in November 2022.
Join us for our next Wellbeing Report seminar
In this seminar, Anita Chandra will describe some of the key issues in measuring and investing in well-being, with particular attention to the intersection of resilience and well-being and community-level actions. Dr. Chandra will share insights from work to build resilience capacities and capabilities and to measure resilience and well-being. Key topics will include translating resilience capabilities into actions that help communities to advance well-being overall, issues of social infrastructure and the impacts from overlapping acute and chronic disasters, and emerging topics such as the valuation of resilience and thriving capabilities.
About the presenter
Anita Chandra (she/her) is vice president and director of RAND Social and Economic Well-Being and a senior policy researcher at the RAND Corporation. The division also manages RAND's Center to Advance Racial Equity Policy. She leads studies on civic well-being and community planning; disaster response and resilience; public health emergency preparedness; health and health equity; child health and development, and effects of military deployment on families.
Throughout her career, Dr. Chandra has engaged government and nongovernmental partners to consider cross-sector solutions for improving community well-being and to build more robust systems, implementation and evaluation capacity. This work has taken many forms, including engaging with federal and local government agencies on building systems for emergency preparedness and resilience both in the United States and globally; partnering with private sector organizations to develop the science base around child systems; and collaborating with city governments and foundations to modernize data systems and measure environmental sustainability, well-being, and civic transformation.
Dr. Chandra has also partnered with community organizations to conduct broad-scale health and environmental needs assessments, to examine the integration of health and human service systems, and to determine how to integrate equity and address the needs of historically marginalized populations in human service systems. These projects have occurred in partnership with businesses, foundations, and other community organizations. Dr. Chandra earned a Dr.P.H. in population and family health sciences from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in the United States.
Ngā mihi nui
Te Tai Ōhanga – The Treasury