Also Inside: How Gender Biases Affect Teacher Assessments in Ghana
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IPA Random Update
LATEST RESEARCH & NEWS
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FEATURED STUDY
Why the Government Struggles to Take Back Control of Medellín's Gang-Run Neighborhoods
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Researchers: Christopher Blattman, Gustavo Duncan, Benjamin Lessing, and Santiago Tobón
Urban armed groups, especially criminal gangs, are a growing threat to peace and economic growth in cities across the world. These groups often exert state-like powers, enforcing contracts, policing, and taxing businesses in the areas they informally govern. The conventional wisdom suggests that criminal organizations provide governance when states do not, and that increasing state services could crowd gangs out. In partnership with the City of Medellín, researchers randomly introduced a program that intensified government outreach to gang-controlled neighborhoods. The study found no evidence that the city’s intervention reduced gang rule.
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FEATURED STUDY
Gender Bias in Assessments of Teacher Performance in Ghana
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Researchers: Sabrin Beg, Anne Fitzpatrick, and Adrienne Lucas
Professional advancement often depends on subjective performance reviews, especially in developing countries where objective data on performance may not be available. But subjective reviews may be susceptible to personal biases based on characteristics like gender. To better understand this in the education sector in Ghana, researchers compared both principals’ reviews and teacher self-assessments of effectiveness to an objective measure: increases in student test scores. Female teachers were objectively more effective based on increases in student test scores. However, principals were 11 percentage points less likely to rate a female teacher as effective compared to a male teacher. These findings contribute to the evidence on gender biases in subjective assessments and related barriers faced by women in labor markets in developing countries.
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and the summary here
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FEATURED BLOG
Why IPA Has Launched a Human Trafficking Research Initiative (and What’s Next)
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By Ellen Bates-Jefferys and Jeni Sorensen
Policymakers and civil society groups have been working for decades to reduce instances of human trafficking through prevention, protection, prosecution, policy, and partnership efforts. Many advances have been made in putting necessary frameworks and laws into place, such as the widespread ratification of the Palermo Protocol, which establishes an international definition of trafficking in persons and enhances international cooperation to prosecute trafficking crimes and assist victims of trafficking. However, more needs to be done within the human trafficking field to critically examine current counter-trafficking interventions and strengthen the evidence base for effective interventions to reduce trafficking and support survivors.
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BLOG
IPA Safely Returning to In-Person Research—A 2021 Update
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By Steven Glazerman
RECOVR Roundup Vol. 12: Social Protection in the Time of COVID-19
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By Luciana Debenedetti, Jeffrey Mosenkis, and Rachel Strohm
Can a Telenovela Help Kids Stay in School during COVID-19?
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By Sergio De Marco and Barbara Sparrow
RECOVR Roundup Vol. 11: Social Protection in the Time of COVID-19
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By Luciana Debenedetti, Jeffrey Mosenkis, and Rachel Strohm
Women in Policy: Using Data to Respond to the COVID Education Crisis in Peru, The Philippines, and Colombia
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By Luciana Debenedetti
Women in Policy: Promoting Education and Fighting Gender-Based Violence in Zambia and Kenya
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By Luciana Debenedetti
Women in Policy Series: Social Policy in Colombia and Improving Education in Ghana
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By Luciana Debenedetti
IPA IN THE NEWS
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Nigeria Entrepreneurship on NPR's Planet Money (updated)
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Poverty Probability Index, Measurement for Farm Cooperatives in Ghana
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EVENTS
UPCOMING
Combating Violence Against Women through State Institutions: Emerging Evidence and Implications for Practice
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April 2 | Webinar, United States
RECENT
Webinar | Criminal Leviathans: How Prison Gangs Organize Crime and Threaten the State from Behind Bars
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March 31 | Webinar, United States
RECOVR Webinar Series | Informing Health, Social, and Economic Policy on COVID-19 in Zambia and Rwanda
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March 29 | Webinar, Rwanda
Providing Evidence to Inform the Review of the Kenya Population Policy of 2021
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March 18 | Online, Kenya
IPA Presents on Round 2 of RECOVR Survey to Côte d’Ivoire's Ministry of Education
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March 17 | Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire
Learning in the Time of a Pandemic: Effects of COVID-19 on Students’ Learning and the Wider Education Sector in Ghana
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March 11 | Webinar, Ghana
IPA Philippines Presents on Teacher Needs Assessment Study to the Department of Education
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March 5 | Online, Philippines
IPA Philippines Presents at 2021 Monitoring and Evaluation Forum
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February 24 | Online, Philippines
RECOVR Webinar Series | COVID-19 and Forced Displacement in the Global South | Evidence from High-Frequency Phone Surveys
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February 23 | Webinar, United States
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