ISER Working Paper Series
From Institute for Social and Economic Research
Publications Office, Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex CO4 3SQ UK.
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- 2003-03: Time, through the lifecourse, in the family

- Jonathan Gershuny
- 2003-02: The impact of atypical employment on individual wellbeing: evidence from a panel of British workers

- Marco Francesconi and Elena Bardasi
- 2003-01: A effect of labour market conditions and family background on educational attainment of Spanish youngsters

- Elena Caquel
- 2002-32: A cross-country comparison of survey nonparticipation in the ECHP -ISER working paper-

- Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
- 2002-31: Non-response in dynamic panel data models -working paper-

- Cheti Nicoletti
- 2002-30: Single mothers

- John Ermisch and Kenneth Burdett
- 2002-29: Labour as a buffer: do temporary workers suffer?

- Marco Francesconi, Alison Booth and Jeff Frank
- 2002-28: Free to choose? Differences in the hours determination of constrained and unconstrained workers

- Mark Bryan
- 2002-27: What determines income mobility differences across the European Union?

- Luis Ayala and Mercedes Sastre
- 2002-26: Europe vs. the United States: is there a trade-off between mobility and inequality?

- Luis Ayala and Mercedes Sastre
- 2002-25: An evaluation of the childhood family structure measures from the sixth wave of the British Household Panel Survey

- Marco Francesconi
- 2002-24: A new measure of gender bias

- Diganta Mukherjee
- 2002-23: The material returns to partnership: the effects of educational matching on labour market outcomes and gender equality

- Marco Francesconi and Malcolm Brynin
- 2002-22: Tell me why I don’t like Mondays: investigating day of the week effects on job satisfaction and psychological well-being

- Mark Taylor
- 2002-21: The effect of parents’ employment on children’s educational attainment: 2002 ed

- Marco Francesconi and John Ermisch
- 2002-20: The effect of family income during childhood on later-life attainment: evidence from Germany

- Stephen Jenkins and Christian Schluter
- 2002-19: Trying again: repartnering after dissolution of a union

- John Ermisch
- 2002-18: Beating the odds (2): a new index of intergenerational social mobility

- Jonathan Gershuny
- 2002-17: Beating the odds (1): intergenerational social mobility from a human capital perspective

- Jonathan Gershuny
- 2002-16: Wealth: its use, level, inheritance and change: in relation to human capital

- Jonathan Gershuny
- 2002-15: Human capital, marriage and regression

- Diganta Mukherjee
- 2002-14: Accounting for poverty differences between the United States, Great Britain and Germany

- Stephen Jenkins and Martin Biewen
- 2002-13: Chewing the fat: the story time diaries tell about physical activity in the United Kingdom

- Kimberly Fisher
- 2002-12: Childhood parental behaviour and young people’s outcomes

- Marco Francesconi, John Ermisch and David J. Pevalin
- 2002-11: The three-day week of 1974 and measurement error in the FES and NCDS data sets

- Nathan Grawe
- 2002-10: Trends in poverty: the UK in international perspective: how rates mislead and intensity matters

- Lars Osberg
- 2002-09: Room for differences? social policy in a global economy

- Lars Osberg
- 2002-08: Modelling low income transitions

- Stephen Jenkins and Lorenzo Cappellari
- 2002-07: The association between reported and calculated reservation wages

- Böheim, René
- 2002-06: Intergenerational social mobility and assortative mating in Britain

- Marco Francesconi and John Ermisch
- 2002-05: PEDAKSI: methodology for collecting data about survey non-respondents

- Peter Lynn
- 2002-04: Royal Economic Society survey on the gender and ethnic balance of academic economics 2000

- Jonathan Burton, Heather Joshi and Amanda Rowlatt
- 2002-03: Unions, temporary employment and hours of work: a tale of two countries

- Marco Francesconi and Carlos García-Serrano
- 2002-02: A new measure of social position: social mobility and human capital in Britain

- Jonathan Gershuny
- 2002-01: Web-use and net-nerds: a neo-functionalist analysis of the impact of information technology in the home

- Jonathan Gershuny
- 2001-24: Separating refusal bias and non-contact bias: evidence from UK national surveys

- Peter Lynn and Paul S. Clarke
- 2001-23: Recommended standard final outcome categories and standard definitions of response rate for social surveys

- Peter Lynn, Jean Martin, Roeland Beerten and Johanna Laiho
- 2001-22: Addressing the interpretation and the aggregation problems in totally fuzzy and relative poverty measures

- Andrea Filippone, Bruno Cheli and Antonella D'Agostino
- 2001-21: Developing quality standard for cross-national survey research: five approaches

- Peter Lynn
- 2001-20: Social structure and life chances

- Jonathan Gershuny
- 2001-19: Fertility and female labour supply

- Maria Iacovou
- 2001-18: Leaving home in the European Union

- Maria Iacovou
- 2001-17: Examining the impact of macro-economic conditions on income inequality

- Stephen Jenkins and Jäntti, Markus
- 2001-16: Why are child poverty rates higher in Britain than in Germany? a longitudinal perspective -working paper-

- Stephen Jenkins and Christian Schluter
- 2001-15: The dynamics of individual male earnings in Great Britain: 1991-1999

- Xavi Ramos
- 2001-14: Ethnic minorities in the UK: burden or benefit?

- Aslan Zorlu
- 2001-13: Earnings mobility among Italian low paid workers

- Lorenzo Cappellari
- 2001-12: Family composition and children’s educational outcomes

- Maria Iacovou
- 2001-11: Rich place, poor place: an analysis of geographical variations in household income within Britain

- Richard Berthoud
- 2001-10: Class size in the early years: is smaller really better?

- Maria Iacovou