Blog

ISER researchers discuss their work in these blog posts.

Maternal investments in children: the role of expected effort and returns

  1. Sonia Bhalotra

Inequalities in child developmental outcomes emerge early in life and persist, with parents playing a critical role in determining these differences. MiSoC researcher Professor Sonia Bhalotra investigates the importance of subjective expectations of returns to and effort costs of the two main investments that mothers make in newborns: breastfeeding and stimulation

Do migrants undercut the job quality of natives?

  1. Neli Demireva

MiSoC researcher Dr Neli Demireva, together with Dr Wouter Zwysen, investigate the employment outcomes and types of jobs migrants, ethnic minorities and white British majority members do

Political and ethnic identity

  1. Lucinda Platt
  2. Alita Nandi

MiSoC’s Dr Alita Nandi and Professor Lucinda Platt (LSE) investigate the relationship between people’s political and ethnic identities across different majority / minority ethnicities

Ethnic discrimination in the labour market

  1. Simonetta Longhi
  2. Malcolm Brynin

MiSoC’s Malcolm Brynin and Simonetta Longhi (now at Reading) have provided vital evidence to the debate on inequality in the labour market, in particular on pay gaps within jobs

The impact of Brexit on the EU migrants in UK Higher Education

  1. Renee Luthra

MiSoC’s Dr Renee Luthra describes her new research into how Brexit was experienced by highly skilled migrants in the UK higher education sector, a sector reliant on EU migration, and the ways that employment in higher education buffered staff against its impact

Income inequality and the very rich

  1. Mike Brewer

MiSoC research shows that data from household surveys may not give the whole picture of the UK’s income inequality levels

Subjective Expectations: Measurement and analysis of decision-making under uncertainty

  1. Adeline Delavande

An insight into pioneering work by MiSoC’s Adeline Delavande on the measurement of subjective expectations. She pushes forward the agenda of asking decision-makers directly about their subjective expectations, and, with collaborators, has pioneered the elicitation of subjective expectations in developing countries.

What does the decrease in child mortality really mean?

  1. Sonia Bhalotra

In a short video for VoxDev, Professor Sonia Bhalotra discusses her research on how a decline in child mortality influences women’s choices of labour market participation, marriage, and fertility.