KEVIN F. MCCARTHY ’67
KEVIN F. MCCARTHY, 70, a RAND Corp. social scientist who worked on projects ranging from immigration to the arts, died Mar. 17, 2015. After receiving master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, he was an instructor there and a consultant with the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. He joined RAND in 1976 and retired in 2007 but continued to contribute to RAND research in an adjunct capacity until 2013. He began his career working on housing policies, an area where he developed tools to help predict family mobility and its impact on housing. He later directed the RAND Institute for Civil Justice and headed an initiative at RAND that studied the role of the arts in the American economy and society. He also authored a series of studies examining the impact of immigration on California’s economy and studied options for rebuilding housing in the Gulf Coast region after Hurricane Katrina. In addition, he conducted analyses of demographic and economic trends in Mexico and the Caribbean Basin, the Middle East, and Russia. Known as one of RAND’s most versatile researchers in terms of the range of public policy issues he tackled, according to its president, his work “helped cities, states, judiciaries and museums address some of their most difficult issues.” He is survived by his wife, Susan Edwards McCarthy.