Displaying Publications 1 - 30 of 38 in total
Current search: 'Thomas F. Crossley'
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Experiments on multiple requests for consent to data linkage in surveys
Sandra Walzenbach, Jonathan Burton, Mick P. Couper, et al.
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Young and ethnic minority workers were hardest hit at the start of COVID, but not anymore
Thomas F. Crossley, Paul Fisher, Peter Levell, et al.
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Young and ethnic minority workers were hardest hit at the start of COVID, but not anymore
Thomas F. Crossley, Paul Fisher, Peter Levell, et al.
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Young and ethnic minority workers were hardest hit at the start of COVID, but not anymore
Thomas F. Crossley, Paul Fisher, Peter Levell, et al.
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A year of COVID: the evolution of labour market and financial inequalities through the crisis
Thomas F. Crossley, Paul Fisher, Peter Levell, et al.
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A year of COVID: the evolution of labour market and financial inequalities through the crisis
Thomas F. Crossley, Paul Fisher, Peter Levell, et al.
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MPCs in an economic crisis: spending, saving and private transfers
Thomas F. Crossley, Paul Fisher, Peter Levell, et al.
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How and why does the mode of data collection affect consent to data linkage?
Annette Jäckle, Jonathan Burton, Mick P. Couper, et al.
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High frequency online data collection in an annual household panel study: some evidence on bias prevention and bias adjustment
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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Understanding and improving data linkage consent in surveys
Annette Jäckle, Jonathan Burton, Mick P. Couper, et al.
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Experiments on multiple requests for consent to data linkage in surveys
Sandra Walzenbach, Jonathan Burton, Mick P. Couper, et al.
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The heterogeneous and regressive consequences of COVID-19: evidence from high quality panel data
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Protect BAME people hit financially by Covid, says UK thinktank
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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The heterogeneous and regressive consequences of COVID-19: evidence from high quality panel data
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The heterogeneous and regressive consequences of COVID-19: evidence from high quality panel data
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The heterogeneous and regressive consequences of COVID-19: evidence from high quality panel data
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Briefing note COVID-19 survey: family relationships
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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Briefing note COVID-19 Survey: the economic effects
Thomas F. Crossley, Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, et al.
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Black, minority Britons hit hardest by COVID job losses, researchers say
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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Coronavirus hitting BAME and single parent families worst financially
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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BAME and single-parent families worst hit financially by Covid-19
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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Observing, understanding and improving society - for everyone
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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The idiosyncratic impact of an aggregate shock: the distributional consequences of COVID-19
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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The representativeness of Understanding Society
Michaela Benzeval, Christopher R. Bollinger, Jonathan Burton, et al.
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Integrated data: research potential and data quality
Michaela Benzeval, Christopher R. Bollinger, Jonathan Burton, et al.
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Understanding and reducing income reporting error in household surveys
Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, Paul Fisher, et al.
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Understanding Society Innovation Panel Wave 11: results from methodological experiments
Jonathan Burton, Roxanne Connelly, Mick P. Couper, et al.
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Regression with an imputed dependent variable
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Returns to scale in food preparation and the Deaton–Paxson puzzle
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Understanding how people think about their daily spending
Mary Suffield, Heidi Hasbrouck, Alice Coulter, et al.