What are your favorite or most anticipated books by professional economists published in 2021?

[a thread]
I'm looking forward to listening to the audiobook of Goldin's *Career & Family*! press.princeton.edu/books/hardcove…
I'm ALSO looking forward to listening to the audiobook of Diane Coyle's *Cogs and Monsters*. press.princeton.edu/books/hardcove…
Amartya Sen's memoir looks great. wwnorton.com/books/97813240…
I haven't finished Kaushik Basu's *Policymaker's Journal* but I've enjoyed some great insights so far. simonandschuster.com/books/Policyma…
I've seen good reviews of Emily Oster's *The Family Firm*. penguinrandomhouse.com/books/639450/t…
Scott Cunningham's *Causal Inference: The Mixtape* draws on a work by this year's Nobel prize winners, so it's hot right now. mixtape.scunning.com (Came out in January!)
What am I missing that you enjoyed or are really looking forward to in the waning months of the year?
For more on methods, check out *The Effect* by Nick Huntington-Klein. Free online here theeffectbook.net and to be released in print in December.
Jadrian Wooten's book combines two of my favorite things. routledge.com/Parks-and-Recr…
Benjamin Ho's book looks at trust through an economist's lens cup.columbia.edu/book/why-trust…
Nina Banks brings together speeches and writings of the first Black American economist, Sadie T. M. Alexander! yalebooks.yale.edu/book/978030024…
Coming in December! De Brauw and Bulte on African farmers, value chains, and agricultural development! palgrave.com/gp/book/978303…
*Survival of the City* by Glaeser and Cutler! penguinrandomhouse.com/books/669805/s…
Economist Dambisa Moyo on *How Boards Work*

basicbooks.com/titles/dambisa…

(I've never really known, so maybe this is my big chance to understand it!)
Alex Thomas's introduction to macro! cambridge.org/us/academic/su…
And if you're like: I don't need an intro to macro, I need some ADVANCED macro, there's this. press.lse.ac.uk/site/books/m/1…
Jan Eeckhout's *The Profit Paradox: How Thriving Firms Threaten the Future of Work*

press.princeton.edu/books/hardcove…

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More from @DaveEvansPhD

13 Oct
Has anyone written a handbook chapter or review paper on the best ways to measure student absenteeism in low- and middle-income countries?

It would ideally lays out the various measurement options (spot checks! administrative records! self-reports!) with the pros & cons of each.
I know there are studies on individual pieces of this. For example, Baird & @BerkOzler12 have a 2012 article comparing self-reports to school ledgers. drive.google.com/file/d/0B274-J…
.@TolonenAnja et al. discuss some efforts to cross-validate in their article "Measuring Menstruation-related Absenteeism Among Adolescents in Low-Income Countries" library.oapen.org/bitstream/hand… Image
Read 4 tweets
27 Sep
Who's in the mood for a Monday morning education research round-up?

Friday was the third and final day of the Research on Improving Systems of Education annual conference (#RISEConf2021)!

riseprogramme.org/events/rise-an…

In case you missed it, here’s a quick catch-up!

[thread]
Gabrielle Wills: “In 2020 grade 2 students lost between 57% and 70% of a year of learning relative to their pre-pandemic peers. Among a grade 4 sample, learning losses are estimated at between 62% and 81% of a year of learning” in South Africa. sciencedirect.com/science/articl…
Moitshepi Matsheng (@Young1ove): While schools were closed during COVID-19 in Botswana, “SMS messages and phone calls with parents to support their child” improved “learning by 0.12 standard deviations.” Now being adapted in several other countries! nber.org/papers/w28205
Read 18 tweets
24 Sep
Yesterday was the SECOND day of the Research on Improving Systems of Education annual conference (#RISEConf2021)! School management, equity and choice, and what education interventions we should trash!

riseprogramme.org/events/rise-an…

Did you miss it? Here’s a quick round-up!

[thread] Image
@Gabriela_LSC: Training school heads on violence prevention in Peru increased reports of violence and reduced transfers from schools. (It didn’t affect test scores, but come on, not everything has to improve test scores. Let’s just keep the kids from getting hurt!) #RISEConf2021 ImageImageImageImage
@JacobusCilliers: A school governance reform in Tanzania that shifted focus from school inspections to school support had little impact BUT adding low-cost measures to increase follow-up from ward education officers modestly boosted learning.
riseprogramme.org/sites/default/… #RISEConf2021 ImageImageImageImage
Read 16 tweets
11 Nov 20
Each year, the World Bank's Development Impact blog publishes a series of posts by job market candidates about their original research. Here's a running thread.
"Digitising microfinance loans to create female enterprise growth" by @EmmaRiley19
"Cracking open new markets: A contract helps farmers in Senegal meet export quality standards." by @JoshDeutschmann
Read 23 tweets
7 Oct 20
Recent research in Africa demonstrates the return to “structured pedagogy” interventions to boost learning. In our paper “Education in Africa: What Are We Learning?” (cgdev.org/publication/ed…), @AcostaAminaM & I identified several recent papers. [thread]
What are "structured pedagogy" interventions? In our review, we define them as "those that provide a variety of inputs to improve teaching, such as lesson plans and training for teachers together with new materials
for students."
Several studies come out of a pilot that was then scaled in Kenya, but there are others as well! (So if you're familiar with that work, don't stop scrolling.)
Read 14 tweets
10 Jul 20
Once I asked policy makers in a middle-income country what I could do to make sure an education report I was writing would be useful to them. One said, “Stop telling us about Finland & Singapore!” Here are two alternative examples of successful education reform. [thread] Image
The state of Ceará & the municipality of Sobral, both in Brazil, have managed a complete turnaround in their basic education systems over two decades. Two new reports extensively document how.

Here's a two pager summarizing both bit.ly/2CjUc1l, by @loureiroandre & me Image
Not enough for you? Here's a 15-page executive summary laying it out in more detail: "Getting Education Right: State and Municipal Success in Reform for Universal Literacy in Brazil." bit.ly/3eineM2 by @loureiroandre and me Image
Read 7 tweets

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