Editorial Advisory Board
Inequality: Causes and Consequences
ISBN: 978-1-78560-811-7, eISBN: 978-1-78560-810-0
ISSN: 0147-9121
Publication date: 25 February 2016
Citation
(2016), "Editorial Advisory Board", Inequality: Causes and Consequences (Research in Labor Economics, Vol. 43), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, p. vii. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0147-912120160000043002
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2016 Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Orley C. Ashenfelter
Princeton University
Francine D. Blau
Cornell University
Richard Blundell
University College London
Alison L. Booth
Australian National University
David Card
University of California
Ronald G. Ehrenberg
Cornell University
Richard B. Freeman
Harvard University
Reuben Gronau
Bank of Israel
Daniel S. Hamermesh
University of Texas
James J. Heckman
University of Chicago
Alan B. Krueger
Princeton University
Edward P. Lazear
Stanford University
Christopher A. Pissarides
London School of Economics
Yoram Weiss
Tel-Aviv University
Klaus F. Zimmermann
IZA and University of Bonn
- Inequality: Causes and Consequences
- Research in Labor Economics
- Inequality: Causes and Consequences
- Copyright Page
- Editorial Advisory Board
- Preface
- Inequality of Opportunity in Europe: Is There a Role for Institutions?
- Household Lifetime Inequality Estimates in the U.S. Labor Market
- Estimating the Intergenerational Elasticity and Rank Association in the United States: Overcoming the Current Limitations of Tax Data
- Income Shocks or Insurance – What Determines Consumption Inequality?
- The Role of Establishments and the Concentration of Occupations in Wage Inequality
- Inequality and Changes in Task Prices: Within and between Occupation Effects
- Intergenerational Transmission of Skills and Differences in Labor Market Outcomes for Blacks and Whites
- The College Wage Premium over Time: Trends in Europe in the Last 15 Years
- Rising Wage Inequality, Real Wage Stagnation and Unions
- Is There an Advantage to Working? The Relationship between Maternal Employment and Intergenerational Mobility
- Does Income Inequality in Early Childhood Predict Self-Reported Health in Adulthood? A Cross-National Comparison of the United States and Great Britain