- Neli Demireva
Blog
ISER researchers discuss their work in these blog posts.
Four key methods for evaluating policy impact
Dr Angus Holford writes for the National Centre for Research Methods (NCRM) about his upcoming training course Introduction to Impact Evaluation
The value of keeping ethnic ties: why adherence to recommended COVID-19 health behaviours differs among young adults
- Adeline Delavande
- Renee Luthra
- Angus Holford
Professor Renee Luthra writes for the International Public Policy Observatory about our latest ESRC Research Centre on Micro-Social Change study on behaviours during lockdown
Are there ethnic differences in adherence to recommended health behaviours related to Covid-19?
- Renee Luthra
Professor Renee Luthra on new research using a novel data set
Which housing inequalities have been amplified by COVID-19, and what can be done to make the situation fairer for renters?
- Amy Clair
MiSoC’s Amy Clair writes for the International Public Policy Observatory looking at which housing inequalities have been amplified by COVID-19
MiSoC Workshop on Women in the Labour Market (15-16 April 2021)
MiSoC student Liza Benny writes a blog detailing the sucessful workshop on ‘Women in the Labour Market’
How have school closures affected children’s mental health?
Birgitta Rabe, Laura Fumagalli and co-authors write for the Economics Observatory on the negative impact of the pandemic on the mental health of children and young people
Update: How is the response to coronavirus affecting gender equality?
- Susan Harkness
Susan Harkness provides an update on her blog for the ESRC’s Economics Observatory, on how mothers have been hit harder by widening inequalities in employment since the first Covid-19 lockdown.
Are UK immigrants selected on education, skills, health and social networks?
- Renee Luthra
Professor Renee Luthra writes for LSE
The gig is up! Do workers really ‘choose’ unstable jobs?
Writing for the Institute for the Future of Work, Dr Silvia Avram shares the results of a new experimental study aimed at examining workers’ reactions to uncertainty about work availability and pay.
A Level Economics is a gateway to the economics profession
In a blog for the Institute for Fiscal Studies, MiSoC student Sonkurt Sen with IFS co-authors Arun Advani and Ross Warwick explore the effect of A level choices on improving diversity among economists