ĚÇĐÄvlogąŮÍř

The Harvard Center for International Development is home to faculty affiliates from each school at Harvard University, working across sectors in developing nations around the world.

Faculty research is published in a wide range of academic and policy venues and can be found through the feed and filters below. Select faculty research papers are highlighted in our Faculty Research Insights series on our blog, CID Voices.

CID working papers published by Harvard faculty, graduate students, and research fellows prior to 2024 can be found here

Showing results 51 - 60 of 370

Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Michael Woolcock
Working Paper No. 10051
Responding effectively and with professional integrity to the many challenges of public administration requires recognizing that access to more and better quantitative data is…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Paul Chang
Vol. 86, Issue 1, Pages 132-153
Objective This study examines the determinants of marriage decline in South Korea, a representative case of the “demographic crisis” sweeping East Asia. Background The major…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Catherine Elizabeth Snow
Vol. 9
Children from historically marginalized racial/ethnic and socioeconomic groups, on average, score lower on widely used assessments of academic, executive functioning, and social-…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Andrew Dean Ho
Pages 45302
This article presents the consensus of an National Council on Measurement in Education Presidential Task Force on Foundational Competencies in Educational Measurement.…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Bill Kerr
We study the relationship between firm centralization and organizational reproduction in satellite locations. For decentralized firms, the ethnic compositions of inventors in…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Awa Ambra Seck
Between 1830 and 1962, six million Africans living under colonial rule served in the French army. Most were deployed internationally to maintain order or fight French wars. After…
Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Joseph Henrich
Large language models (LLMs) have recently made vast advances in both generating and analyzing textual data. Technical reports often compare LLMs’ outputs with “human” performance…