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JOHN HODDINOTT CONTACT INFORMATION _________________________________________________________ Savage Hall, Room 305 tel: 607 255 8443 / 240 447 0918 Division of Nutritional Sciences email: [email protected] Cornell University skype: john.hoddinott Ithaca, NY, USA 14853 RePEc handle: http://ideas.repec.org/f/pho272.html SSRN handle: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=327761 CURRENT POSITION___________________________________________________________________ H.E. Babcock Professor of Food & Nutrition Economics and Policy, Professor of Applied Economics and Management, Professor of Global Development and Professor of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University. Graduate Fields in Applied Economics and Management, Economics, Nutritional Sciences and Public Affairs. Adjunct Faculty Member, University of Waterloo. Non-Resident Senior Fellow, International Food Policy Research Institute. EDUCATION__________________________________________________________________________ 1986 – 1989 D. Phil. (Economics), University of Oxford. 1984 - 1986 M.A. (Economics), York University, Canada. 1980 - 1984 B.A. (Honours, Economics), University of Toronto, Canada. PAST POSITIONS ______________________________________________________________________ 2002 – 2015 Deputy Division Director, Senior Research Fellow, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C. 2010 Visiting Lecturer, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS), Tokyo 2009 – 2014 Adjunct Faculty Member, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Maryland 2000 – 2002 Associate Professor of Economics (tenured), Department of Economics, Dalhousie University, 2000-2002. Cross-appointment with International Development Studies. Adjunct Professor, 2002-2007. 1997 - 2000 Acting Division Director (2000); Senior Research Fellow; Research Fellow, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C. 1993 – 1997 University Lecturer (CUF) in Economics and Fellow and Tutor (tenured), Lady Margaret Hall, University of Oxford. 1990 – 1997 Research Officer, Centre for the Study of African Economies, Oxford. Research Associate 1997-2014 (approx.) 1994 – 1997 Senior Research Associate, Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford. 1995 Visiting Professor, Department of Economics, University of Toronto. 1991 Visiting Lecturer, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University. 1989 - 1993 Research Lecturer in Economics, Trinity College, Oxford. 1988 - 1989 Lecturer in Economics, Worcester College, Oxford. 1988 Research Associate, Economics Department, University of Nairobi. 1986 Research Economist, Ontario Ministry of Treasury and Economics.

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Page 1: John Hoddinott CV January 2020 - Cornell University · JOHN HODDINOTT CONTACT INFORMATION _____ _____ Savage Hall, Room 305 tel: 607 255 8443 / 240 447 0918

JOHN HODDINOTT CONTACT INFORMATION _________________________________________________________ Savage Hall, Room 305 tel: 607 255 8443 / 240 447 0918 Division of Nutritional Sciences email: [email protected] Cornell University skype: john.hoddinott Ithaca, NY, USA 14853 RePEc handle: http://ideas.repec.org/f/pho272.html SSRN handle: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=327761 CURRENT POSITION___________________________________________________________________ H.E. Babcock Professor of Food & Nutrition Economics and Policy, Professor of Applied Economics and Management, Professor of Global Development and Professor of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University. Graduate Fields in Applied Economics and Management, Economics, Nutritional Sciences and Public Affairs. Adjunct Faculty Member, University of Waterloo. Non-Resident Senior Fellow, International Food Policy Research Institute. EDUCATION__________________________________________________________________________ 1986 – 1989 D. Phil. (Economics), University of Oxford. 1984 - 1986 M.A. (Economics), York University, Canada. 1980 - 1984 B.A. (Honours, Economics), University of Toronto, Canada. PAST POSITIONS ______________________________________________________________________ 2002 – 2015 Deputy Division Director, Senior Research Fellow, International Food Policy Research

Institute, Washington D.C. 2010 Visiting Lecturer, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS), Tokyo 2009 – 2014 Adjunct Faculty Member, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University

of Maryland 2000 – 2002 Associate Professor of Economics (tenured), Department of Economics, Dalhousie

University, 2000-2002. Cross-appointment with International Development Studies. Adjunct Professor, 2002-2007.

1997 - 2000 Acting Division Director (2000); Senior Research Fellow; Research Fellow, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C.

1993 – 1997 University Lecturer (CUF) in Economics and Fellow and Tutor (tenured), Lady Margaret Hall, University of Oxford.

1990 – 1997 Research Officer, Centre for the Study of African Economies, Oxford. Research Associate 1997-2014 (approx.)

1994 – 1997 Senior Research Associate, Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford. 1995 Visiting Professor, Department of Economics, University of Toronto. 1991 Visiting Lecturer, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton

University. 1989 - 1993 Research Lecturer in Economics, Trinity College, Oxford. 1988 - 1989 Lecturer in Economics, Worcester College, Oxford. 1988 Research Associate, Economics Department, University of Nairobi. 1986 Research Economist, Ontario Ministry of Treasury and Economics.

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PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ____________________________________________________ Member, Technical Committee on Folate Status and Neural Tube Defect Risk Reduction, Micronutrient Foundation: 2016-2017 Program Co-Chair, NEUDC 2018 Program Committee, NEUDC 2016-present Member, High Level Panel of Experts Project Team on Social Protection, United Nations Committee on World Food Security: 2011-2012 Managing Editor, Journal of African Economies: 2009-present Associate Editor, Economics and Human Biology: 2011-present Associate Editor, Food Security: 2011-2014 Member, Editorial Board, Agricultural and Resource Economics Review: 2014-present Member, Editorial Board, The Journal of Development Studies: 2003-present Member, Editorial Board, Oxford Development Studies: 1997-2007 Member, Publications Review Committee, International Food Policy Research Institute: 2000, 2005-2008 Leland Program Policy Advisor, Congressional Hunger Center: 2009-2011 Technical Advisor, Strengthening Emergency Needs Assessment Capacities (SENAC), World Food Programme: 2005-2008 RESEARCH INTERESTS ____________________________________________________ I am interested in the causes of poverty, food insecurity and undernutrition, and the design and evaluation of interventions that would reduce these. I have also undertaken work on poverty dynamics, intrahousehold resource allocation, schooling, labour markets, aid allocation and on improving survey methods. My current research interests focus on the links between economics (especially social protection, agriculture and gender), food security and human capital formation (especially early life nutrition). I have led or participated in the evaluations of some of the largest social protection programs in the developing world, including the Vulnerable Group Development scheme in Bangladesh, Brazil’s Bolsa Familia cash transfer program, Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme, PROGRESA in Mexico and South Africa’s Child Support Grant. Throughout my career, I have been heavily involved in primary data collection through living in a mud hut in western Kenya and a small town near Timbucktu Mali as well as developing longitudinal and cross-sectional household and community surveys in Bangladesh, Cote d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Kenya, Mali, Namibia, Niger and Zimbabwe. I have given more than 200 formal presentations of this work, as well as informal presentations in developed and developing countries to audiences including cabinet ministers, Canadian parliamentarians, members of the United States House of Representatives, senior officials in various governments and donor agencies, and village leaders in various African countries. My work has been cited in media outlets including the Guardian, the Daily Telegraph, the Economist, Newsweek, the New York Times, Slate, the Times of India, Vox, the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post.

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PUBLICATIONS_______________________________________________________________ Books and monographs [B8] M. Adato and J. Hoddinott (eds), 2010 Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [B7] A. Ahmed, A. Quisumbing, M. Nasreen, J. Hoddinott, and E. Bryan. 2010. Comparing Food and Cash Transfers to the Ultra-Poor in Bangladesh, IFPRI Research Monograph 163, (Washington: International Food Policy Research Institute). [B6] M. Adato, L. Haddad and J. Hoddinott, 2005, Power, Politics and Performance: Community Participation in South African Public Works Programs, IFPRI Research Report 143, (Washington: International Food Policy Research Institute). [B5] D. Coady, M. Grosh and J. Hoddinott, 2004. The Targeting of Transfers in Developing Countries: Review of Experience and Lessons, (Washington: World Bank and IFPRI). Simultaneously published in Spanish and Russian. Arabic and Indonesian translations, 2005. [B4] J. Hoddinott (ed.), 2001. Food Security in Practice: Methods for Rural Development Projects, (Washington: International Food Policy Research Institute). Spanish translation, 2003. [B3] B. Baulch and J. Hoddinott (eds.), 2000. Economic Mobility and Poverty Dynamics in Developing Countries, (London: Frank Cass). [B2] L. Haddad, J. Hoddinott and H. Alderman (eds.), 1997. Intrahousehold Resource Allocation in Developing Countries: Models, Methods and Policy, (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [B1] S. Devereux and J. Hoddinott (eds), 1992. Fieldwork in Developing Countries, (Harvester Wheatsheaf, UK and Lynne Reinner, USA).

Refereed journal articles [J97] K. Hirvonen and J. Hoddinott, forthcoming, “Beneficiary views on cash and in-kind payments: Evidence from Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme”, World Bank Economic Review. [J96] E. Knippenberg, D. Jolliffe and J. Hoddinott, forthcoming, "Land Fragmentation and Food Insecurity in Ethiopia", American Journal of Agricultural Economics. [J95] Behrman, J, J. Hoddinott and J. Maluccio, forthcoming. Nutrition, adult cognitive skills and productivity: Results and influence of the Oriente Longitudinal Study, Food and Nutrition Bulletin. Spanish translation published as: Behrman, J, J. Hoddinott and J. Maluccio, 2019. Nutricion y habilidades cognitivas y productividad del adulto: Resultados y contribucion del Estudio Longitudinal de Oriente del INCAP. In Estudio Longitudinal de Oriente del INCAP: 50 anos contribuyendo a la nutricion publica. Ramirez M. y M. Mazariegos (eds). Guatemala: INCAP.

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[J94] A. Quisumbing, A. Ahmed, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, J. Leroy, P. Menon, D. Olney, S. Roy and M. Ruel, forthcoming, “Randomized controlled trials of multi-sectoral programs: Lessons from development research”, World Development. [J93] F. Gomes, S. Adu-Afarwuah, C. Ajello, G. Bergeron, R. Black, J. Hoddinott and 21 others, forthcoming. “Setting research priorities on multiple micronutrient supplementation in pregnancy”, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. [J92] S. Roy, M. Hidrobo, J. Hoddinott and A. Ahmed, 2019, “Transfers, behavior change communication, and intimate partner violence: Post-program evidence from rural Bangladesh”, Review of Economics and Statistics 101(5): 865-877. https://doi.org/10.1162/rest_a_00791 [J91] M. Santoso, R. Kerr, J. Hoddinott, P. Garigipati, S. Olmos and S. Young, 2019, “What is the role of women’s empowerment in child nutrition outcomes? A systematic review”, Advances in Nutrition, 10(6): 1138-1151. https://doi.org/10.1093/advances/nmz056 [J90] D. Headey, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott and D. Stifel, 2019, "Rural food markets and child nutrition”, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 101(5): 1311-1327. [Lead article]. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajae/aaz032. [J89] M. Bourassa, S. Osendarp, S. Adu-Afarwuah, S. Ahmed, J. Hoddinott and 24 others, 2019, “Review of the evidence regarding the use of antenatal multiple micronutrient supplementation in low- and middle-income countries”, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1444 (1): 6-21. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.14121 [J88] D. Headey, K. Hirvonen and J. Hoddinott, 2018, “Animal sourced foods and child stunting”, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 100(5): 1302-1319. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajae/aay053 [J87] S. Gillespie, J. Hoddinott, N. Nisbett, S. Arifeen and M. van den Bold, 2018, “Evidence to Action: Highlights from Transform Nutrition Research (2012-17)”, Food and Nutrition Bulletin, 39(3): 335-360 [Lead article]. https://doi.org/10.1177/0379572118788155 [J86] J. Hoddinott, S. Sandström and J. Upton, 2018, “The impact of cash and food transfers: Evidence from a randomized intervention in Niger”, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 100(4): 1032-1049. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajae/aay019 [J85] N. D. Ford, J. Behrman, J. Hoddinott, J. Maluccio, R. Martorell, M. Ramirez-Zea and A. D. Stein, 2018, “Exposure to improved nutrition from conception to age 2 y and adult cardiometabolic disease risk”, Lancet Global Health, 6(8): e875-e884. : https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30231-6 [J84] J. Hoddinott, A. Ahmed and S. Roy, 2018, “Randomized control trials demonstrate that nutrition sensitive social protection interventions increase the use of Sprinkles and other iron supplements in rural pre-school Bangladeshi children", Public Health Nutrition, 21(9): 1753-1761. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980017004232 [J83] J. Hoddinott, 2018, “The investment case for folic acid fortification in developing countries”, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1414(1): 72-81. : https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.13527

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[J82] J. Hoddinott, A. Ahmed, N. Karachiwalla and S. Roy, 2018, “Nutrition behaviour change communication causes sustained effects on IYCN knowledge in two cluster-randomised trials in Bangladesh”, Maternal and Child Nutrition, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12498 [J81] M. Hidrobo, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar and M. Olivier, 2018, “Social protection, food security and assets”, World Development, 101: 88-103. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2017.08.014 [J80] J. Hoddinott, I. Ahmed, A. Ahmed and S. Roy, 2017. “Behavior change communication activities and their impact on infant and young child nutrition knowledge and practice of neighboring non-participants in rural Bangladesh”, PLoS One. : https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0179866 [J79] K. Hirvonen and J. Hoddinott, 2017. “Agricultural production and children’s diets: Evidence from rural Ethiopia”, Agricultural Economics, 49(4): 469-480. : https://doi.org/10.1111/agec.12348 [J78] C. Heinrich, J. Hoddinott, and M. Samson, 2017. “Reducing adolescent risky behaviors in a high-risk context: The effects of unconditional cash transfers in South Africa”, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 65(4): 619-652. : https://doi.org/10.1086/691552 [J77] D. Headey, J. Hoddinott and S. Park, 2017. “Accounting for nutritional changes in six success stories: A regression-decomposition approach”, Global Food Security, 13: 12-20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2017.02.003 [J76] K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, B. Minten and D. Stifel, 2017. “Children’s diets, nutrition knowledge, and access to markets", World Development, 95: 303-315. : https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2017.02.031 [J75] D. Headey and J. Hoddinott, 2016. “Agriculture, nutrition and the Green Revolution in Bangladesh”, Agricultural Systems, 149: 122-131. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agsy.2016.09.001 [J74] J. Hoddinott, N. Karachiwalla, N. Ledlie and S. Roy, 2016. “Adolescent girls’ infant and young child nutrition knowledge sources differ among rural and urban samples in Bangladesh”, Maternal and Child Nutrition, 12(4): 885-897. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/mcn.12355 [J73] D. Headey, J. Hoddinott and S. Park, 2016. “Drivers of nutritional change in four south Asian countries: A dynamic observational analysis”, Maternal and Child Nutrition, 12(Suppl. 1): 210-218. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12274 [J72] E. Puentes, F. Wang, J. Behrman, F. Cunha, J. Hoddinott, J. Maluccio, L. Adair, J. Borja, R. Martorell, and A. Stein, 2016. “Early life height and weight production functions with endogenous energy and protein inputs”, Economics and Human Biology, 22: 65-81. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ehb.2016.03.002 [J71] J. Hoel, B. Schwab and J. Hoddinott, 2016. “Self-control fatigue, cognitive function, and the expression of time preference: Experimental results from Ethiopia”, Journal of Economic Psychology, 52: 136-146. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joep.2015.11.005 [J70] D. Headey and J. Hoddinott, 2015. “Understanding the rapid reduction of undernutrition in Nepal, 2001–2011”, PLoS One, 10(12): e0145738 (13pp). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145738

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[J69] J. Hoddinott, D. Headey, and M. Dereje, 2015. “Cows, missing milk markets and nutrition in rural Ethiopia,” Journal of Development Studies, 51(8): 958-975. https://doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2015.1018903 [J68] A. de Brauw, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott and S. Roy, 2015. “The impact of Bolsa Família on schooling” World Development, 70(6): 303-316. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2015.02.001 [J67] A. Margolies and J. Hoddinott, 2015. “Costing alternative transfer modalities”, Journal of Development Effectiveness, 7(1): 1-17 [Lead article]. https://doi.org/10.1080/19439342.2014.984745 [J66] A. de Brauw, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott and S. Roy, 2015. “Bolsa Família and household labor supply” Economic Development and Cultural Change, 63(3): 423-457 [Lead article]. https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/680092 [J65] D. Headey, J. Hoddinott, D. Ali, R. Tesfaye and M. Dereje, 2015. “The other Asian enigma: Explaining the rapid reduction of malnutrition in Bangladesh”, World Development, 66(2): 749-761. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2014.09.022 [J64] J. Heathers, J. Hoel, S. Wegerif, B. Schwab, N. Ledlie, K. Abay, G. Berhane and J.Hoddinott, 2014. “Smartphone platform survey-scale heart rate collection – A performance evaluation in Ethiopia”, Proceedings of Wireless Health 2014, 1-6. [J63] G. Berhane, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar and A. Seyoum Taffesse, 2014. “Can Social Protection Work in Africa? Evidence on the impact of Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme on food security and assets”, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 63(1): 1-26 [Lead article]. [J62] A. de Brauw, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott and S. Roy, 2014. “The Impact of Bolsa Familia on women’s decision-making power,” World Development, 59(July): 487-504. doi:10.1016/j.worlddev.2013.02.003 [J61] J. Behrman, J. Hoddinott, J. Maluccio, E. Soler-Hampejsek, E. Behrman, R. Martorell, M. Ramirez-Zea, and A. Stein, 2014. “What Determines Adult Cognitive Skills? Impacts of Pre-School, Schooling and Post-School Experiences in Guatemala,” Latin America Economic Review, 23(4). [J60] M. Hidrobo, J. Hoddinott, A. Peterman, A. Margolies, and V. Moreira, 2014 “Cash, food, or vouchers? Evidence from a randomized experiment in Northern Ecuador” Journal of Development Economics, 107: 144-156. [J59] J. Hoddinott, J. Maluccio, J. Behrman, R. Martorell, Paul Melgar, Agnes R. Quisumbing, Manuel Ramirez-Zea, Aryeh D. Stein, and Kathryn M. Yount, 2013. “Adult consequences of growth failure in early childhood,” American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 98: 1170-1178. [J58] J. Hoddinott, H. Alderman, J. Behrman, L. Haddad and S. Horton, 2013. “The economic rationale for investing in stunting reduction”, Maternal and Child Nutrition, 9(Suppl 2): 69-82. [J57] R. Sabates-Wheeler, J. Lind and J. Hoddinott, 2013. “Implementing social protection in pastoralist areas: how local distribution structures moderate PSNP outcomes in Ethiopia,” World Development, 50(1): pp. 1-12[Lead article].

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[J56] S. Mani, J. Hoddinott and J. Strauss, 2013. “Determinants of Schooling Outcomes - Empirical Evidence from Rural Ethiopia”, Journal of African Economies, 22(5): 693-731. [J55] R. Vargas Hill, N. Kumar and J. Hoddinott, 2013. “Adoption of weather-index insurance: Learning from willingness to pay among a panel of households in rural Ethiopia,” Agricultural Economics, 44(4-5):385-398. [J54] K. Yount, J. Behrman, J. Hoddinott, J. Maluccio, A. Murphy, and U. Ramakrishnan, 2013. “Does schooling increase and schooling gender gaps decline with increases in parental schooling and wealth? Evidence from over a quarter century in rural Guatemala,” Population Research and Policy Review, 32(4): 495-528, http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11113-013-9270-0. [J53] J. Hoddinott, G. Berhane, D. Gilligan, N. Kumar and A. Seyoum Taffesse, 2012. “The Impact of Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme and related transfers on agricultural productivity,” Journal of African Economies, 21(5): 761-786. [J52] S. Mani, J. Hoddinott and J. Strauss, 2012. “Long-term impact of investments in early schooling – Empirical evidence from rural Ethiopia”, Journal of Development Economics, 99(2): 292-299. [J51] S. Dercon, J. Hoddinott and T. Woldehanna, 2012. “Growth, poverty and chronic poverty in rural Ethiopia: Evidence from 15 Communities 1994-2009,” Journal of Development Studies, 48(2): 238-253, http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/00220388.2011.625410 [J50] A. de Brauw and J. Hoddinott, 2011. “Must Conditional Cash Transfer Programs be conditioned to be effective? The impact of conditioning transfers on school enrollment in Mexico,” Journal of Development Economics, 96(2): 359-370. doi:10.1016/j.jdeveco.2010.08.014. [J49] K. Yount, J. Hoddinott and A. Stein, 2010. “Disability and self-reported health among older women and men in rural Guatemala: The role of obesity and chronic conditions”, Social Science and Medicine 71(8): 1418-1427. DOI: doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.06.046. [J48] D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott, and A. Seyoum Taffesse, 2009. “An analysis of Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme and its linkages”, Journal of Development Studies 45(10): 1684-1706. [J47] K. Yount, J. Hoddinott, A. Stein and A. DiGirolamo, 2009. “Individual capital and cognitive aging in Guatemala,” Population Studies 63(3): 295-306. [J46] J. Behrman, M. C. Calderon, S. Preston, J. Hoddinott, R. Martorell and A. Stein, 2009. “Nutritional supplementation of girls influences the growth of their children: Prospective study in Guatemala,” American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 90(5): 1372-1379. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.2009.27524 [J45] S. Dercon, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott and T. Woldehanna. 2009. “The impact of roads and agricultural extension on consumption growth and poverty in fifteen Ethiopian villages,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 91(4): 1007-1021. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8276.2009.01325.x [J44] J. Maluccio, J. Hoddinott, J. Behrman, R. Martorell, A. Quisumbing, and A. Stein, 2009. “The impact of nutrition during early childhood on education among Guatemalan Adults”, Economic Journal 119(April): 734-763. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0297.2009.02220.x

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[J43] A. Stein, M. Wang, A. DiGirolamo, J. Hoddinott, R. Martorell, M. Ramirez-Zea, and K. Yount, 2009. “Height for Age Increased While Body Mass Index for Age Remained Stable between 1968 and 2007 among Guatemalan Children”, Journal of Nutrition 139(2): 365-369. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/jn.108.098343 [J42] M. Islam and J. Hoddinott, 2009, “Evidence of intra-household flypaper effects from a nutrition intervention in rural Guatemala,” Economic Development and Cultural Change 57(2): 215-248. [Lead article] DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/592876 [J41] J. Hoddinott, M. Cohen and C. Barrett, 2008, “Renegotiating the Food Aid Convention: Background, Context, and Issues,” Global Governance 14(3): 283-304. Text/More Information Online (HTML) [J40] A. Stein, P. Melgar, J. Hoddinott, and R. Martorell, 2008, “Cohort Profile: The INCAP Nutritional Trial Cohort Study,” International Journal of Epidemiology 37(4): 716-720. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyn028 [J39] J. Hoddinott, J. Maluccio, J. Behrman, R. Flores and R. Martorell, 2008, “Effect of a nutrition intervention during early childhood on economic productivity in Guatemalan adults”, The Lancet 371: 411-416. This paper received the CGIAR Science Award for an Outstanding Scientific Article 2009. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(08)60205-6 [J38] J. Hoddinott, 2007, “Social protection: To target or not to target”, IDS Bulletin 38(3): 90-94. http://www.ids.ac.uk/index.cfm?objectId=7491287B-E346-B0AC-0F40A6145C744CE2 [J37] D. Gilligan and J. Hoddinott, 2007, “Is there persistence in the impact of emergency food aid? Evidence on consumption, food security and assets in rural Ethiopia”, American Journal of Agricultural Economics 89(2): 225-242. [Lead article. Received American Agricultural Economics Association Outstanding Journal Article Award] http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8276.2007.00992.x

[J36] H. Alderman, J. Behrman and J. Hoddinott, 2007, “Economic and nutritional analyses offer substantial synergies for understanding human nutrition”, Journal of Nutrition 137: 537-544. http://jn.nutrition.org/cgi/reprint/137/3/537.pdf

[J35] H. Alderman, J. Hoddinott and B. Kinsey, 2006, “Long term consequences of early childhood malnutrition”, Oxford Economic Papers 58(3): 450-474. Reprinted in Food Security, ed. by M. Rosegrant, Sage Publications, 2014. This paper was nominated for the CGIAR Science Award for an Outstanding Scientific Article 2007. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oep/gpl008 [J34] J. Hoddinott, 2006. “Shocks and their consequences across and within households in rural Zimbabwe”, Journal of Development Studies 42(2): 301-321. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220380500405501 [J33] S. Dercon, J. Hoddinott and T. Woldehanna, 2005. “Shocks and consumption in 15 Ethiopian Villages, 1999-2004”, Journal of African Economies 14(4): 559-585. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jae/eji022 [J32] S. Harrower and J. Hoddinott, 2005. “Consumption smoothing in the Zone Lacustre, Mali,” Journal of African Economies 14(4): 489-519. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jae/eji007

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[J31] A. Abdulai, C. Barrett and J. Hoddinott, 2005. “Does food aid really have disincentive effects? New evidence from sub-Saharan Africa”, World Development 33(10): 1689-1704. [J30] J. Behrman and J. Hoddinott, 2005. “Program evaluation with unobserved heterogeneity and selective implementation: The Mexican Progresa impact on child nutrition”, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 67: 547-569. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0084.2005.00131.x [J29] J. Hoddinott, J. Behrman and R. Martorell, 2005. “Labor force participation and income among young Guatemalan adults”, Food and Nutrition Bulletin, 26(2, Supplement 1): S98−S109. [J28] A.D. Stein, C. Gregory, J. Hoddinott, R. Martorell, U. Ramakrishnan, and M. Ramirez-Zea, 2005. “Physical activity level, dietary habits, and alcohol and tobacco use among a cohort of young Guatemalan adults”, Food and Nutrition Bulletin, 26(2, Supplement 1): S78-S87. [J27] M. Ramirez-Zea, P. Melgar, R. Flores, J. Hoddinott, U. Ramakrishnan and A.D. Stein, 2005. “Physical fitness, body composition, blood pressure, and blood metabolic profile among a cohort of Guatemalan adults”, Food and Nutrition Bulletin, 26(2, Supplement 1): S88-S97. [J26] J. Hoddinott and E. Skoufias, 2004. “The impact of PROGRESA on food consumption”, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53(1): 37-61. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/423252 [J25] D. Coady, M. Grosh and J. Hoddinott, 2004. “Targeting outcomes redux”, World Bank Research Observer, 19(1): 61-85. [J24] R. Macdonald and J. Hoddinott, 2004. “Determinants of Canadian bilateral aid: Humanitarian, commercial or political?” Canadian Journal of Economics, 37(2): 294-312. [J23] T. Owens, J. Hoddinott and B. Kinsey, 2003. “Ex ante actions and ex post public responses to drought shocks: Evidence and simulations from Zimbabwe” World Development, 31(7): 1239-1256. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0305-750X(03)00068-8 [J22] T. Owens, J. Hoddinott and B. Kinsey, 2003. “The impact of agricultural extension on farm production in resettlement areas of Zimbabwe”, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 51(2): 337-358. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/346113 [J21] J. Hoddinott, 2002. “Participation and poverty reduction: An analytical framework and overview of the issues”, Journal of African Economies, 11(1): 144-166. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jae/11.1.146 [J20] J. Hoddinott and B. Kinsey, 2001. “Child growth in the time of drought”, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 63(4): 409-436. [Lead article] DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0084.t01-1-00227 [J19] L. Christiaensen, J. Hoddinott and G. Bergeron, 2001. “Comparing village characteristics derived from rapid appraisals and household surveys: A tale from northern Mali”, Journal of Development Studies, vol. 37(1): 1-20. [Lead article] [J18] B. Baulch and J. Hoddinott, 2000. “Economic mobility and poverty dynamics in developing countries”, Journal of Development Studies, 36(6): 1-24. [Lead article] DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220380008422652

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[J17] J.W. Gunning, J. Hoddinott, B. Kinsey and T. Owens, 2000. “Revisiting forever gained: Income dynamics in the resettlement areas of Zimbabwe, 1983-1997”, Journal of Development Studies, 36(6): 131-154. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220380008422657 [J16] S. Morris, C. Carletto, J. Hoddinott and L. Christiaensen, 2000. “Validity of rapid estimates of household wealth and income for health surveys in rural Africa”, Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 54(5): 381-387. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech.54.5.381 [J15] P. Maggs and J. Hoddinott, 1999. “The impact of changes in common property resource management on intrahousehold allocation” Journal of Public Economics, 72(2): 317-324. Reprinted in Property rights and environmental problems, ed. by B. Larson, Ashgate, 2003. [J14] S. Appleton, J. Hoddinott and P. Krishnan, 1999. “The gender wage gap in three African countries”, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 47(2): 289-312. [J13] J. Hoddinott, 1996. “Wages and unemployment in an urban African labour market”, Economic Journal, 106(439): 1610-1626. [J12] S. Appleton, J. Hoddinott and J. Mackinnon, 1996. “Education and health in sub-Saharan Africa”, Journal of International Development, 8(3): 307-340. [Lead article] DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-1328(199605)8:3<307::AID-JID394>3.0.CO;2-D [J11] S. Appleton, J. Hoddinott and J. Knight, 1996. “Primary education as an input into post-primary education: A neglected benefit”, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, vol. 57(1): 211-219. [J10] J. Hoddinott, 1996. “The intrahousehold distribution of food: An economic perspective” Social Change, 26(2): 45-56. Reprinted in Demographic transition: An Asian perspective, ed by R. Balakrishnan, 2011. [J9] C. Udry, J. Hoddinott, L. Haddad and H. Alderman, 1995. “Gender differentials in farm productivity: Implications for household efficiency and agricultural policy”, Food Policy, 20(5): 407-423. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0306-9192(95)00035-D [J8] J. Hoddinott and L. Haddad, 1995. “Does female income share influence household expenditures? Evidence from Côte d'Ivoire”, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 57(1): 77-96. [J7] H. Alderman, P.A. Chiappori. L. Haddad, J. Hoddinott and S.M.R. Kanbur, 1995. “Unitary versus collective household models: Time to shift the burden of proof?” World Bank Research Observer, 10(1): 1-19. [Lead article]. Reprinted in The Economics of Food Security, ed. by Raghbendra Jha and Raghav Gaiha, Edward Elgar, 2015. [J6] H. Alderman, L. Haddad, J. Hoddinott and S. Vosti, 1994. “Strengthening agricultural and natural resource policy through intrahousehold analysis: An introduction”, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 76(December): 1208-1212. [J5] J. Hoddinott, 1994. “A model of migration and remittances applied to western Kenya” Oxford Economic Papers, 46(3): 459-476.

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[J4] L. Haddad and J. Hoddinott, 1994. “Women's income and boy-girl anthropometric status in the Côte d'Ivoire”, World Development, 22(4): 543-553. [J3] E. Francis and J. Hoddinott, 1993. “Migration and differentiation in western Kenya: A tale of two sub–locations”, Journal of Development Studies, 30(1): 115-145. [J2] J. Hoddinott, 1992. “Modelling remittance flows in Kenya”, Journal of African Economies, 1(2): 206-232. [J1] J. Hoddinott, 1992. “Rotten kids or manipulative parents: Are children old age security in western Kenya?” Economic Development and Cultural Change, 40(3): 545-566. Reprinted in The economics of the family, ed. by N. Folbre, Edward Elgar, 1996. Reviewed commentary [L1] L. Richter, C. Desmond, J. Behrman, J. Hoddinott and 12 others, 2018. G20’s Initiative for Early Childhood Development, The Lancet 392: 2695-2696. Chapters in books [C44] J. Hoddinott and A.S. Taffesse, 2019. “Social protection in Ethiopia” in The Oxford Handbook of the Ethiopian Economy ed by C. Cramer, F. Cheru, and A. Oqubay (Oxford: Oxford University Press). [C43] K. Hirvonen, D. Headey, J. Golan and J. Hoddinott, 2019. “Changes in child undernutrition rates in Ethiopia 2000-2016” in The Oxford Handbook of the Ethiopian Economy ed by C. Cramer, F. Cheru, and A. Oqubay (Oxford: Oxford University Press). [C42] J. Hoddinott, 2018. “Comment on ‘Human capital and shocks’ and ‘Poverty and cognitive function’” in The economics of poverty traps and chronic poverty ed by C. Barrett, M. Carter and J.P. Chavas (Chicago: University of Chicago Press). https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226574448.001.0001. [C41] M. Samson, C. Heinrich, J. Hoddinott, G. Laryea-Adjei, T. Buthelezi, S. Jehoma, M. Mogosti, T. Stevens, I. van Nierkek and E. Nyokangi, 2016. “The impact of a promise realized: South Africa’s Child Support Grant” in From evidence to action: The story of cash transfers and impact evaluation in sub-Saharan Africa ed by B. Davis, S. Handa, N. Hypher, N. Rossi, P. Winters and J. Yablonski (Oxford: Oxford University Press). https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198769446.003.0013. [C40] R. Pearson, S. Afaw, A. Baschieri, B. Birru, G. Berhane, T. Chaiban, B. Davis, S. Devereux, J. Hoddinott, J. Hoel, J. Kagin, N. Ledlie, H. Lemma, D. Mahonde, R. Pigois, P. Pozarny, K. Roelen, B. Schwab, P. Salama, I. Sessay, J.E. Taylor, F.N. Tegebu, Y. Tsegay, and D. Webb, 2016. “The role of the Tigray Social Cash Transfer programme and its evaluation in the evolution of the Tigray social policy” in From evidence to action: The story of cash transfers and impact evaluation in sub-Saharan Africa ed by B. Davis, S. Handa, N. Hypher, N. Rossi, P. Winters and J. Yablonski (Oxford: Oxford University Press). https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198769446.003.0008

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[C39] J. Hoddinott, S. Gillespie and S. Yosef, 2016. “Public-private partnerships and undernutrition: Examples and future prospects” in Hidden hunger. Malnutrition and the first 1,000 days of life: Causes, consequences and solutions ed by H. Biesalski and R. Black (Basel: Karger). https://doi.org/10.1159/000442110 [C38] J. Hoddinott, 2014. “Looking at development through a resilience lens” in Resilience ed by S. Fan and R. Pandya-Lorch (Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute). [C37] A. Margolies and J. Hoddinott, 2014. “Mapping the impacts of food aid: Current knowledge and future directions” in Food Security ed by M. Rosegrant (London: Sage Publications). [C36] J. Hoddinott, R. Sabates-Wheeler, G. Berhane, M. Handino, N. Kumar, J. Lind, A. S. Taffesse, and M. Tefera, 2013. “Implementing large scale food security programmes in rural Ethiopia: Insights from the Productive Safety Net Programme” ed by A. Pankhurst, D. Rahmato and G-J van Uffelen (Addis Ababa: Forum for Social Studies). [C35] J. Hoddinott, M. Rosegrant and M. Torero, 2013. “Investments to reduce hunger and undernutrition”, in Global Problems, Smart Solutions ed. by B. Lomborg (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press). [C34] S. Coll-Black, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, A. S. Taffesse, and W. Wiseman, 2012. “Targeting food security interventions in Ethiopia: The Productive Safety Net Programme” in Food and Agriculture in Ethiopia: Progress and Policy Challenges ed. by P. Dorosh and S. Rashid (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press). [C33] J. Hoddinott, 2012. “Agriculture, health, and nutrition: Toward conceptualizing the linkages” in Reshaping agriculture for Nutrition and Health ed by S. Fan and R. Pandya-Lorch (Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute). [C32] J. Hoddinott, 2012. “Uncovering the consequences of pre-school malnutrition” in Children growing up in poverty: Multidisciplinary approaches ed by J. Boyden and M. Bourdillon (London: Palgrave). [C31] S. Dercon, J.Hoddinott, P. Krishnan and T. Woldehannna, 2012. “Collective action and vulnerability: Burial societies in rural Ethiopia,” in Collective action and property rights for poverty reduction: Lessons from Africa and Asia ed by E. Mwangi, H. Markelova, and R. Meinzen-Dick (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press). [C30] J. Hoddinott and A. Quisumbing, 2010. “Methods for microeconometric risk and vulnerability assessment” in Risk, Vulnerability and Human Development: On the brink ed by R. Fuentes-Nieva and P. Seck (London: Palgrave Macmillan- United Nations Development Programme). [C29] J. Hoddinott, D. Gilligan and A.S. Taffesse, 2010. “The impact of Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Program on Schooling and Child Labor” in Social Protection for Africa’s Children ed by S. Handa, S. Devereux, and D. Webb (London: Routledge). [C28] M. Adato and J. Hoddinott, 2010. “Conditional Cash Transfer Programs: A “Magic Bullet”?” in Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America: A Magic Bullet to Reduce Poverty? ed. by M. Adato and J. Hoddinott (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press).

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[C27] J. Hoddinott, 2010. “Nutrition and Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) Programs” in Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America: A Magic Bullet to Reduce Poverty? ed. by M. Adato and J. Hoddinott (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [C26] J. Hoddinott and D. Wiesmann , 2010. “The Impact of Conditional Cash Transfer Programs on Food Consumption in Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua” in Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America: A Magic Bullet to Reduce Poverty? Ed. By M. Adato and J. Hoddinott (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [C25] M. Adato and J. Hoddinott, 2010. “Conditional Cash Transfers in the Second Decade: Current Debates and New Frontiers” in Conditional Cash Transfers in Latin America: A Magic Bullet to Reduce Poverty? Ed. By M. Adato and J. Hoddinott (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [C24] J. Hoddinott and L. Bassett, 2009. “Los programas de transferencias monetarias condicionadas y la nutricion en America Latina: Evaluacion de impactos y estrategias para mejorarlos,” in Transferencias condicionadas, estrategias de combatae al hambre y la desnutricion en America Latina y el Caribe vol. II (Santaigo: Food and Agriculture Organization). [C23] J. Hoddinott, S. Dercon, and P. Krishnan, 2009. “Networks and informal mutual support in 15 Ethiopian villages,” in Institutional Economics Perspectives on African Agricultural Development, ed. by J. Kirsten, A. Dorward, C. Poulton, and N. Vink (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [C22] H. Alderman, J.R. Behrman and J. Hoddinott, 2008. “Health and nutrition and economic development,” in International Handbook of Development Economics, ed. by A. Dutt and J. Ros, eds., (Northhampton, MA: Edward Elgar). [C21] M. Bourdillon, P. Hebinck, J. Hoddinott with B. Kinsey, J. Marondo, N. Mudege and T. Owens, 2007. “Assessing the impact of HYV maize in resettlement areas of Zimbabwe”, in Agricultural research and poverty: Economic and social impacts in six countries, ed. by M. Adato and R. Meinzen-Dick (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [C20] J. Behrman, H. Alderman and J. Hoddinott, 2007. “Hunger and malnutrition”, in How to spend $50 billion to make the world a better place, ed by Bjorn Lomborg (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). A slightly revised version appeared in Solutions for the World's Biggest Problems: Costs and Benefits ed by Bjorn Lomborg (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). [C19] H. Alderman, J. Behrman and J. Hoddinott, 2005. “Nutrition, malnutrition and economic growth”, in Health and economic growth: Findings and policy implications ed. by G. López-Casasnovas, B. Rivera and L. Currais (Cambridge MA: MIT Press). [C18] S. Dercon and J. Hoddinott, 2005. “Health, shocks and poverty persistence” in Insurance against poverty ed. by S. Dercon (Oxford: Oxford University Press). [C17] J. Behrman, H. Alderman and J. Hoddinott, 2004. “Hunger and malnutrition”, in Global crisis, global solutions ed. by B. Lomborg (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press). [C16] J. Behrman and J. Hoddinott, 2003. “Social safety nets for more adaptable labor markets in developing countries”, in Improving Labor Market Opportunities and Security for Workers in Developing

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Countries ed by W. Kosanovich, Bureau of International Labor Affairs Research Symposium, Vol. 1 (Washington DC: United States, Department of Labor). [C15] J. Hoddinott, 2002. “СОЦіаЛьна ПОЛіТИКА: розробка та втілення” (“Social policy with a particular emphasis on youth: Issues in design and implementation”) in EKOHOMIчHИЙ POЗВИТОК I ДЕРЖАВНА ПОЛІТИКА, 8, Institute of Public Adminstration, Kyiv Ukraine. [C14] J. Hoddinott, 2001. “Targeting: Principles and practice” in Food security in practice: Methods for rural development projects, (Washington DC: International Food Policy Research Institute). [C13] J. Hoddinott, 2001. “Choosing outcome indicators of household food security” in Food security in practice: Methods for rural development projects, (Washington DC: International Food Policy Research Institute). [C12] J. Hoddinott, 2001. “Introduction” in Food security in practice: Methods for rural development projects, (Washington DC: International Food Policy Research Institute). [C11] S. Appleton, J. Hoddinott, P. Krishnan and K. Max, 1998. “Does the labour market explain lower female schooling? Evidence from three African countries”, in Labour markets, poverty and Development ed by G. Navaretti, R. Faini and G. Zanalda, (Oxford: Oxford University Press). [C10] L. Haddad, J. Hoddinott and H. Alderman, 1997. “Introduction: The scope of intrahousehold allocation issues” in Intrahousehold Resource Allocation in Developing Countries: Models, Methods, and Policy, (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [C9] J. Hoddinott, H. Alderman, and L. Haddad, 1997. “Testing competing models of intrahousehold allocation”, in Intrahousehold Resource Allocation in 7Developing Countries: Models, Methods and Policy, (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [C8] H. Alderman, L. Haddad, and J. Hoddinott, 1997. “Policy issues and intrahousehold allocation”, in Intrahousehold Resource Allocation in Developing Countries: Models, Methods and Policy, (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press). [C7] P. Collier, J. Hoddinott and F. Teal, 1996. “Urban African labor markets and the policy credibility problem”, in African Development Perspectives Yearbook, 1994-1995 ed. by K. Wohlmuth and F. Messner (Hamburg: LIT Verlag). [C6] L. Haddad and J. Hoddinott, 1994. “Household resource allocation in the Côte d'Ivoire: Inferences from expenditure data”, in Poverty, Inequality and Rural Development, ed. by T.A. Lloyd and W.O. Morrissey, (London: MacMillan). [C5] J. Hoddinott, 1993. “Family size and support to the elderly in western Kenya” in Fertility, Family Size and Structure: Consequences for Families and Children, ed. by C. Lloyd, (New York: The Population Council). [C4] G. Eele, R. Hay and J. Hoddinott, 1993. “Household food security and nutrition”, in Analysis Plans for Understanding the Social Dimensions of Adjustment, ed by L. Demery, M. Ferroni and C. Grootaert, (Washington D.C: World Bank).

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[C3] J. Hoddinott, 1992. “Fieldwork under time constraints” in Fieldwork in Developing Countries, (Harvester Wheatsheaf, UK and Lynne Reinner, USA). [C2] S. Devereux and J. Hoddinott, 1992. “The context of fieldwork”, in Fieldwork in Developing Countries, (Harvester Wheatsheaf, UK and Lynne Reinner, USA). [C1] S. Devereux and J. Hoddinott, 1992. “Issues in data collection”, in Fieldwork in Developing Countries, (Harvester Wheatsheaf, UK and Lynne Reinner, USA).

Thesis

J. Hoddinott, 1989. “Migration, Accumulation and Old Age Security in Western Kenya” unpublished D.Phil. thesis, University of Oxford.

Under review [U10] G. Wable Grandner, K. Rasmussen, K. Dickin, P. Menon, R. Kanbur and J. Hoddinott, “Assessing statistical similarity in dietary intakes of women of reproductive age in Bangladesh" submitted to Maternal and Child Nutrition, December 2019. [U9] R. Sabates-Wheeler, J. Lind and J. Hoddinott, “Surviving but still not thriving: learning from the first 10 years of the PSNP on how [not] to support the graduation of poor households" submitted to Development Policy Review, December 2019. [U8] M. Filipski, G. Rosenbach, E. Tiburcio, P. Dorosh, and J. Hoddinott, “Refugees Who Mean Business: Economic Activities in and around the Rohingya Settlements in Bangladesh”, submitted to Journal of Refugee Studies, December 2019. [U7] J. Hoddinott and T. Mekasha, “Social protection, household size and its determinants: Evidence from Ethiopia”, revised version submitted to Journal of Development Studies, November 2019. [U6] S. Blom, A. Ortiz-Bobea and J. Hoddinott, “Heat Exposure and Children’s Nutrition: Evidence from West Africa”, submitted to Review of Economics and Statistics, October 2019. [U5] J. Hoddinott and E. Knippenberg, “Shocks, social protection and resilience: Evidence from Ethiopia”, second revised version submitted to World Development, October 2019. [U4] A. Ahmed, J. Hoddinott, N. Abedin, and N. Z. Hossain, “Economic and health impacts of genetically modified eggplant: Results from a randomized controlled trial of Bt brinjal in Bangladesh”, under revision for American Journal of Agricultural Economics, September 2019. [U3] C. O'Hara, J. Hoddinott, P. Webb and B.L. Rogers, "Dietary pattern analysis provides more informative associations with child anthropometry than dietary diversity scores in two districts of western Nepal”, under revision for Current Developments in Nutrition, September 2019.

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[U2] J. Hoddinott, P. Dorosh, M. Filipski, G. Rosenbach and E. Tiburcio, “Food transfers, electronic food vouchers and child nutritional status among Rohingya children living in Bangladesh”, under revision for PLoS One, September 2019. [U1] C. O'Hara, P. Webb, J. Hoddinott and B.L. Rogers, "Defining dietary patterns using exploratory factor analysis clarifies the relationship between dietary diversity and diet quality in rural Nepal", under revision for PLoS One, August 2019.

Selected work in progress, reports and unpublished mimeos [M88] G. Berhane, J. Golan, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, S. Kim, A.S. Taffesse, Y. Abate, K. Abay, T. Assefa, Y. Habte, M. Hiluf, B. Koru, F. Tadesse, H. Tesfaye, A. Wolle and F. Yimer. 2020. Evaluation of the Nutrition Sensitive Features of the Productive Safety Net Programme IV: Process and Impact. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M87] J. Hoddinott, P. Iyer, R. Sabates and T. Woldehanna. 2019. Evaluating Large-Scale Education Reforms in Ethiopia. RISE Working Paper 19/034. [M86] A. Ahmed, J. Hoddinott, S. Roy and E. Sraboni. 2019. Transfers, nutrition programming, and economic well-being: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1879. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133450. [M85] S. Roy, M. Hidrobo, J. Hoddinott, B. Koch, and A. Ahmed. 2019. Can transfers and behavior change communication reduce intimate partner violence four years post-program? Experimental evidence from Bangladesh. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1869. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133421. [M84] A. Ahmed, J. Hoddinott, and S. Roy. 2019. Food transfers, cash transfers, behavior change communication and child nutrition: Evidence from Bangladesh. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1868. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133420. [M83] M. Filipski, E. Tiburcio, P. Dorosh, J. Hoddinott and G. Rosenbach. Modelling the economic impact of the Rohingya Influx in Southern Bangladesh. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1819. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133397. [M82] K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, J. Lind, R. Sabates-Wheeler, M. Tefera and A.S. Taffesse, “Humanitarian Food Assistance 2018: Process Evaluation Report”, Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC, May 2019. [M81] G. Berhane, I. Birch, L. Cabral, D. Gilligan, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, B. Koru, N. Kumar, J. Lind, R. Sabates-Wheeler, A.S. Taffesse, F. Tadesse, M. Tefera, A. Weldegerima, I. Worku, F. Yimer and Y. Yohannes, “The Productive Safety Net Programme Midline Survey 2018: Program Performance Report”, Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC, April 2019. [M80] G. Berhane, D. Gilligan, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar and A.S. Taffesse, “The Productive Safety Net Programme Midline Survey 2018: Highland Outcomes Report”, Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC, April 2019.

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[M79] G. Berhane, D. Gilligan, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar and A.S. Taffesse, “The Productive Safety Net Programme Midline Survey 2018: Lowlands Outcomes Report”, Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC, April 2019. [M78] J. Lind, R. Sabates-Wheeler, J. Hoddinott, and A. S. Taffesse, “Targeting social transfers in agro-pastoralist and pastoralist societies: Ethiopia's Productive Safety Net Programme revisited”, mimeo, Cornell University, August 2018. [M77] J. Hoddinott, D. Stifel, K. Hirvonen and B. Minten, The impact of large-scale social protection interventions on grain prices in poor countries: Evidence from Ethiopia”, mimeo, Cornell University, May 2018. [M76] G. Berhane, J. Golan, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, S. Kim, A.S. Taffesse, Y. Abate, K. Abay, T. Assefa, Y. Habte, M. Hiluf, B. Koru, F. Tadesse and F. Yimer, 2018. “Evaluation of the Nutrition Sensitive Features of the Productive Safety Nets Programme IV: Baseline Survey Report”, Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M75] J. Hoddinott and N. Broussard, “Income and experiential food security”, mimeo, Cornell University, October 2017. [M74] M.K. Wheeler, D. Lee, W. Vilchez and J. Hoddinott, “Agriculture-nutrition pathways in peri-urban villages: Linking farm production with household diet diversity in the Andean Highlands”, mimeo, Cornell University, August 2017. [M73] J. Hoddinott and E. Knippenberg, 2017. “Shocks, social protection and resilience: Evidence from Ethiopia”. ESSP-IFPRI Discussion paper 109. Addis Ababa. [M72] J. Hoddinott and T. Mekasha, 2017. “Social protection, household size and its determinants: Evidence from Ethiopia”. ESSP-IFPRI Discussion paper 107. Addis Ababa. [M71] J. Hoddinott, G. Berhane and N. Kumar, 2017. “The impact of Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programmme on the Nutritional Status of Children: 2008 – 2012”, IFPRI Discussion paper 1604. Washington DC. [M70] N. Nisbett, R. Longhurst, I. Barnett, F. Feruglio, J. Gordon, J. Hoddinott, F. Jahan, N. Karachiwalla, S. Roy, V. Shah, O. Siddiki, J-P Tranchant, and J. White, 2016. Impact Evaluation of the DfID Programme to Accelerate Improved Nutrition for the Extreme Poor in Bangladesh: Final Report. Institute of Development Studies, Sussex UK. [M69] A. Ahmed, J. Hoddinott, S. Roy, E. Sraboni, W. Quabili, and A. Margolies, 2016. Which kinds of social safety net transfers work best for the ultra poor in Bangladesh? Operation and Impacts of the Transfer Modality Research Initiative. IFPRI: Dhaka. [M68] J. Hoddinott, S. Gillespie, and S. Yosef, “Public-Private Partnerships and the Reduction of Undernutrition in Developing Countries”, Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC, December 2015.

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[M67] J. Upton, S. Sandström and J. Hoddinott, “The impact of cash versus in-kind transfers on informal credit and gift exchange behavior in rural Niger”, Mimeo, October 2015. [M66] G. Berhane, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, A.S. Taffesse, Y. Yohannes, J. Lind, R. Sabates-Wheeler, A. Strickland, M. Tefera, and B. Nishan, 2015. PSNP-HABP Impact Evaluation, 2014. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M65] N. Kumar and J. Hoddinott, 2015. The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme, 2014: Lowlands Programme Outcomes Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M64] G. Berhane, K. Hirvonen and J. Hoddinott, 2015. The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme, 2014: Highlands Programme Outcomes Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M63] G. Berhane, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, A.S. Taffesse, Y. Yohannes, J. Lind, R. Sabates-Wheeler, A. Strickland, M. Tefera, and B. Nishan, 2015. The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme in the Ethiopian Lowlands, 2014: Program Performance Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M62] G. Berhane, K. Hirvonen, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, A.S. Taffesse, Y. Yohannes, J. Lind, R. Sabates-Wheeler, A. Strickland, M. Tefera, and B. Nishan, 2015. The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme and the Household Asset Building Programme in the Ethiopian Highlands, 2014: Program Performance Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M61] S. Roy, I. Barnett, B. Baxter, J. Gordon, J. Hoddinott, N. Karachiwalla, F. Naher, J-P Tranchant, 2015. “Impact evaluation of the DfID programme to accelerate improved nutrition for the extreme poor in Bangladesh: Baseline report”, Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M60] D. Headey and J. Hoddinott, 2014. “Agriculture, nutrition and the Green Revolution in Bangladesh”, Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M59] J. Upton, S. Sandström and J. Hoddinott, 2014. “The impact of cash versus in-kind transfers on informal credit and private transfer behavior in rural Niger” Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M58] G. Berhane, J. Hoddinott, J. Hoel, N. Ledlie, F. Nega Tegebu, B. Schwab and T. Woldu, 2013. Evaluation of the Social Cash Transfer Pilot Programme, Tigray Region, Ethiopia: Midline Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M57] J. Hoddinott, D. Gilligan, M. Hidrobo, A. Margolies, S. Roy, S. Sandström, B. Schwab and J. Upton, 2013. Enhancing WFP’s Capacity and Experience to Design, Implement, Monitor, and Evaluate Vouchers and Cash Transfer Programmes: Study Summary. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M56] J. Hoddinott, S. Sandström and J. Upton, 2013. Impact Evaluation of Cash and Food Transfers in Zinder, Niger: Analytical Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC.

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[M55] J. Hoddinott, S. Sandström and J. Upton, 2013. Impact Evaluation of Cash and Food Transfers in Zinder, Niger: Descriptive Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M54] J. Hoddinott, J. Lind, G. Berhane, F. Flintan, S. Gidey, M. Handino, N. Kumar, B. Nishan, K. Roelen, A. S. Taffesse, M. Tefera and Y. Yohannes, 2013. PSNP-HABP Impact Evaluation, 2012. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M53] J. Hoddinott and J. Lind, 2013. The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme: Lowlands Programme Outcomes Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M52] N. Kumar and J. Hoddinott, 2013. The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme: Highlands Programme Outcomes Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M51] J. Lind, J. Hoddinott, M. Tefera, F. Flintan, and Y. Yohannes, 2013. The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme and the Household Asset Building Programme in the Ethiopian Lowlands, 2012: Program Performance Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M50] G. Berhane, S. Gidey, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, A.S. Taffesse, Y. Yohannes, J. Lind, M. Handino, K. Roelen, M. Tefera, and B. Nishan, 2013. The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme and the Household Asset Building Programme in the Ethiopian Highlands, 2012: Program Performance Report. Mimeo. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC. [M49] J. Behrman, J. Hoddinott, J. Maluccio, and R. Martorell, 2013. “Brains versus brawn: Labor market returns to intellectual and physical human capital in a poor developing country,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute. [M48] A. de Brauw, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott and S. Roy, 2013. “The Impact of Bolsa Família on Schooling Outcomes: Girls’ Advantage Increases and Older Children Gain, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute. [M47] G. Berhane, S. Devereux, J. Hoddinott, F. Nega Tegebu, K. Roelen B. Schwab and T. Woldu, 2012, “Evaluation of the Social Cash Transfers Pilot Programme: Tigray Region, Ethiopia: Baseline Report, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, December. [M46] G. Berhane, S. Devereux, J. Hoddinott, F. Nega Tegebu, K. Roelen, B. Schwab and A.S. Taffesse, 2012, “Evaluation of the Social Cash Transfers Pilot Programme: Tigray Region, Ethiopia: Inception Report, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, July. [M45] HLPE, 2012. “Social protection for food security: A report by the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition of the Committee on World Food Security” (Stephen Devereux, W. B. Eide J. Hoddinott, N. Lustig and K. Subbarao), Rome, June. [M44] C. Heinrich, J. Hoddinott, M. Samson, K. MacQuene, I. van Niekerk and B. Renaud, 2012. “The South African Child Support Grant Impact Assessment: Evidence from a survey of children, adolescents and their households,” mimeo, Economic Policy Research Institute, May.

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[M43] G. Berhane, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar and A.S. Taffesse, 2012. “The impact of Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Nets and Household Asset Building Programme: 2006-2010,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, January. [M42] A. De Brauw, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott, V. Moreira and S. Roy, 2012. “The Impact of Bolsa Familia on Child, Maternal, and Household Welfare,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, January. [M41] A. De Brauw, D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott, V. Moreira and S. Roy, 2012. “Avaliação do Impacto do Bolsa Família 2: Implementation, attrition, operations results, and description of child, maternal and household welfare,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, January. [M40] R. Sabates-Wheeler, J. Lind, M. Handino, J. Hoddinott, M. Tefera, G. Bekele and F. Simma, 2011.” The Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme in Afar, Somali, and selected lowland woredas in Oromiya,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, October. [M39] M.C. Calderon and J. Hoddinott, 2011. “The inter-generational transmission of cognitive skills in Guatemala,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, November . [M38] G. Berhane, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, A.S. Taffesse, M. Diressie, Y. Yohannes, R. Sabates-Wheeler, M. Handino, J. Lind, M. Tefera and F. Simma, 2011. “Evaluation of Ethiopia’s Food Security Program: Documenting Progress in the Implementation of the Productive Safety Nets Programme and the Household Asset Building Programme,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, October. [M37] F. Nisrane, G. Berhane, S. Asrat, G. Getachew, A. S. Taffesse, and J. Hoddinott, 2011. “Sources of Inefficiency and Growth in Agricultural Output in Subsistence Agriculture: A Stochastic Frontier Analysis,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, February. [M36] Gilligan, D., J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, and A. S. Taffesse. 2009. An impact evaluation of Ethiopia's Productive Safety Nets Program. mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute. [M35] D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, A. S. Taffesse, S. Dejene, F. Gezahegn and Y. Yohannes, 2009. “Ethiopia Food Security Program: Report on 2008 Survey,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, June. [M34] D. Wiesmann, L. Bassett, T.Benson and J.Hoddinott, 2009. “Validation of Food Frequency and Dietary Diversity as Proxy Indicators of Household Food Security,” International Food Policy Research Institute Discussion Paper 00870, June. [M33] T. Woldehanna , J. Hoddinott and S. Dercon, 2008. “Poverty and Inequality in Ethiopia: 1995/96 – 2004/05,” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute. [M32] P. Melgar, L. F. Ramírez, S. McNiven, R. M. Mejía, A. DiGirolamo, J. Hoddinott and J. Maluccio, 2008. “Resource flows among three generations in Guatemala study (2007–08): Definitions, tracking, data collection, coverage, and attrition,” Middlebury College Economics Discussion Paper No. 08-03.

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[M31] Gilligan, D.; J. Hoddinott, and A. S. Taffesse. 2007. The impact of Ethiopia's Food Security Program on household food security and wellbeing: An interim assessment. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, D.C. Photocopy. [M30] D. Gilligan, J. Hoddinott, A. Seyoum, S. Dejene, N. Tefera, and Y. Yohannes, 2007. “Ethiopia Food Security Program: Report on 2006 Baseline Survey.” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, June. [M29] D. Gilligan and J. Hoddinott, 2006. “Analysis of the targeting and impact of China rural social protection programs.” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, September. [M28] J. Hoddinott, 2006. “A conceptual framework for appropriate emergency response options.” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, July. [M27] D. Wiesmann, J. Hoddinott, N-L. Aberman and M. Ruel, 2006. “Review and Validation of Dietary Diversity, Food Frequency and Other Proxy Indicators of Household Food Security.” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, May. [M26] E. Lentz, C. Barrett and J. Hoddinott, 2005. “Food Aid and Dependency: Implications for Emergency Food Security Assessments”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, November. [M25] D. Gilligan and J. Hoddinott, 2005. “Using community targeting to provide drought relief: Evidence from Ethiopia”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, April. [M24] S.Dercon and J. Hoddinott, 2005. “Livelihoods, Growth, and Links to Market Towns in 15 Ethiopian Villages”, FCND Discussion Paper 194, February. [M23] M. Adato, L. Haddad and J. Hoddinott, 2004. “Community participation and the performance of public works programs in South Africa”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, December. [M22] J. Hoddinott, C. Adam and E. Ligon, 2004. “Dynamic intrahousehold bargaining, matrimonial property law and suicide in Canada”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, November. [M21] J. Hoddinott, M. Cohen and M.S. Bos, 2003. “Re-defining the role of food aid”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, December. [M20] J. Hoddinott and A. Quisumbing, 2003. “Investing in children and youth for poverty reduction”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, June. [M19] J. Hoddinott and A. Quisumbing, 2003. “Data sources for microeconometric risk and vulnerability assessments”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, June. [M18] J. Hoddinott and A. Quisumbing, 2003. “Methods for microeconometric risk and vulnerability assessments”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, June. [M17] J. Dayton-Johnson and J. Hoddinott, 2002. “Aid, policies and growth, redux”, mimeo, Dalhousie University, July.

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[M16] J. Dayton-Johnson and J. Hoddinott, 2002. “Enhancing the poverty-reduction impact of CIDA bilateral aid through improved country allocations: Aid and non-income measures of well-being”, mimeo, Dalhousie University, July. [M15] J. Hoddinott and Y. Yohannes, 2002. “Dietary diversity as a food security indicator”, FCND Discussion paper No 136, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C, June. [M14] J. Dayton-Johnson and J. Hoddinott, 2002. “Enhancing the poverty-reduction impact of CIDA bilateral aid through improved country allocations: Robustness of the World Bank methodology”, mimeo, Dalhousie University, May. [M13] J. Hoddinott, L. Lethbridge and S. Phipps, 2002. “Is history destiny? Resources, transitions and child education attainments in Canada”, mimeo, Applied Research Branch, Human Resources Development Canada, March. [M12] J. Hoddinott, 2002. Testimony to the (Canadian) House of Commons Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade on the “New partnership for Africa”, Halifax, Nova Scotia, February. [M11] S. Morris, J. Hoddinott and M. Coulibaly, 2001.“Locality-level targeting with limited data: A case study from Cote d’Ivoire”, mimeo, Dalhousie University, October. [M10] J. Dayton-Johnson and J. Hoddinott, 2001. “Enhancing the poverty-reduction impact of CIDA bilateral aid through improved country allocations: Results using the Collier-Dollar methodology”, mimeo, Dalhousie University, May. [M9] L. Christiaensen, R. Boisvert and J. Hoddinott, 2000. “Validating operational food security indicators against a dynamic benchmark: Evidence from Mali”, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 2471, November. [M8] J. Hoddinott, E. Skoufias and R. Washburn, 2000. “The impact of Mexico’s Programa de Educacion, Salud y Alimentacion on consumption”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C., July. [M7] J. Hoddinott, L. Haddad and S. Mukherjee, 2000. “Assets and rural poverty”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C., January. [M6] S. Appleton, I. Chessa and J. Hoddinott, 1999. “Are women the fairer sex? Looking for gender differences in gender bias in Uganda” mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C., November. [M5] S. Devereux and J. Hoddinott, 1999. “Improving food needs assessment methodologies”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C., June. [M4] L. Haddad and J. Hoddinott, 1998. “Incorporating work intensity into household models: A primer for non-economists”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, June.

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[M3] J. Hoddinott and B. Kinsey, 1997. “The impact of health infrastructure on child health: Evidence from a panel study of Zimbabwean households”, mimeo, International Food Policy Research Institute, March. [M2] J. Hoddinott, 1997. “Water, health and income: A review”, FCND Discussion paper No 25, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C. [M1] G. Van Rooy, G. !Naruseb, M. Maasdorp, G. Eele, J. Hoddinott, and S. Stone, 1994. “Household subsistence levels in Namibia: A pilot study in three selected communities”, Social Sciences Division Research Report 10, University of Namibia, February. Presentations at professional meetings (pm), conferences (c), workshops (w), and seminars (s) 2019 (C): Agricultural and Applied Economics Association – ASSA annual conference; NEUDC (W): Forcibly Displaced Myanmar Nationals in Bangladesh, Cox’s Bazar and Dhaka; (S) Cornell University; Ethiopia Public Health Institute, Addis Ababa; Florida International University; IFPRI, Washington DC. 2018 (C): Agricultural and Applied Economics Association – ASSA annual conference; (S) IFPRI, Washington DC; University of Minnesota. 2017 (C): Child Wellbeing and Development, University of Zurich (Keynote address); LSE Conference on Stunting: Past, present and future (Keynote address); NEUDC; The Future of Ethiopia’s Agriculture, Addis Ababa; (W): Workshop on Evidence for action on nutrition in East Africa; (S) Cornell University; Department for International Development, London UK; IFPRI; Save the Children UK (webinar). 2016 (C): Economics and Human Biology Annual Conference (Keynote address); Williams College Center for Development Economics 2016 Conference; NBER Economics of Asset Accumulation and Poverty Traps; NEUDC; (S) IFPRI, Addis Ababa Ethiopia. 2015 (C): Hidden Hunger, University of Hohenheim; CSAE Conference on Economic Development in Africa, Oxford UK; 4th African Food and Nutrition Forum, Addis Ababa (Keynote address); (W) Board for International Food and Agricultural Development/ World Food Prize; Productive Safety Nets Programme Evaluation workshops, Addis Ababa (2), Transfer Modality Research Initiative workshop, Dhaka Bangladesh; Together for Nutrition workshop, Addis Ababa Ethiopia; (S) Cornell University; UNICEF New York. 2014 (C): Addis Ababa 2020 conference on resilience, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; CSAE Conference on Economic Development in Africa, Oxford UK; (W) Evidence based research on food and nutrition in Bangladesh; (S): Bread for the World, Washington DC; Cornell University; ICDDR,B- Dhaka; IFPRI-New Delhi; Public Health Foundation of India; United Nations Development Programme, Addis Ababa. 2013 (C): Hidden Hunger, University of Hohenheim; CSAE Conference on Economic Development in Africa, Oxford UK; UNICEF, Conférence Internationale contre la malnutrition infantile, Paris; (W): Productive Safety

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Nets Programme Evaluation workshops, Adama, Awash, Addis Ababa (2), Bahir Dar (2), Jijiga, Mekelle (2); (S): Ethiopian Development Research Institute; IFPRI (2). 2012 (C): Copenhagen Consensus 2012, Copenhagen Consensus Centre, University of Copenhagen; Food Fortification and Malnutrition, Berlin; (W): Department of Social Development, Government of South Africa; World Food Programme, Ecuador; (S): Cornell University; Ethiopian Development Research Institute; IFPRI; Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex; University of California-Riverside; USAID. 2011 (PM): FASEB/American Society for Nutrition, Washington DC; (C): Delhi 2020 conference on agriculture, health and nutrition, Delhi India; CSAE Conference on Economic Development in Africa, Oxford UK; Foreign Aid: Research and Communication, WIDER, Helsinki Finland (W) World Food Programme, Safety Nets Consultation, Rome Italy; “Enhancing Food Security in Bangladesh: Evidence for Action, Dhaka Bangladesh; Productive Safety Nets Programme Evaluation workshops, Addis Ababa (3), Awasa, Awash, Bahir Dar, Jijiga, Mekelle; (S) IFPRI; University of Maryland; McGill University. 2010 (C): Chronic Poverty Research Centre’s “Ten Years of ‘War against Poverty’ Conference (S): Ministry of Social Development, Brasilia; IFPRI; Inter-American Development Bank; National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS), Tokyo. 2009 (C): BASIS Conference, “Escaping Poverty Traps”, Washington DC; Ethiopia Strategy Support Conference, Addis Ababa; Mesoamerican Congress of Nutritionists, Guatemala City (W): Productive Safety Nets Programme Review Workshop, Addis Ababa; Evaluations of Social Cash Transfer Schemes in Africa, Washington DC (S): Ethiopian Development Research Institute, Addis Ababa; World Bank. 2008 (C): Making Smart Policy: Using Impact Evaluation for Policy Making, World Bank, Washington DC; Convergence between social services provision and productivity enhancing investments in development strategies, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa; (S): Board for International Food & Agriculture Development, Washington DC; Congressional Hunger Centre, Washington DC; Donor Working Group on Food Security, Addis Ababa; International Food Policy Research Institute, Addis Ababa; University of Pennsylvania, University of Southern California; World Bank. 2007 (C): Collective Action and Property Rights for Poverty Reduction, Entebbe Uganda. Food aid: Exploring the challenges, Berlin. Beijing 2020 conference on the world’s poorest and hungry; (S): Food Security Coordination Bureau, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Government of Ethiopia; George Washington University; International Food Policy Research Institute; Wilfred Laurier University; World Bank.

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2006 (PM): American Association for the Advancement of Science; (C): Third International Conference on Conditional Cash Transfers, Istanbul; CIRPEE/Universitie de Laval, Mini-Conference on Development Economics, Quebec City; (W): Workshop on rural social assistance in China, Baoding, Hebei Province, China; Strengthening Emergency Needs Assessment Capacity, World Food Programme; Strengthening nutrition in Latin America and the Caribbean, World Bank; (S): University of Maryland; Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex. 2005 (PM): American Economics Association; Econometric Society 2005 World Congress; (C): World Food Prize Symposium, Des Moines Iowa,; Queen Elizabeth House 50th Anniversary Conference, University of Oxford; (W): Strengthening Emergency Needs Assessment Capacity in WFP, Rome; Preliminary Assessment of the role of Collective Action and Property Rights for Poverty Reduction Workshop, Phillips University, Marburg Germany; BASIS Technical Committee Workshop, Washington DC; Food aid at a crossroads – Policy issues on the use of food aid”, Ottawa; (S): Addis Ababa University; Department for International Development, UK; Michigan State University; United States Agency for International Development, Addis Ababa; University of Guelph. 2004 (C): Northeast Universities Development Consortium; 55 Aniversario del INCAP, “Seguridad Alimentaria Nutricional y las Metas del Milenio” (two presentations), Guatemala City; (S): Emory University; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; United States Agency for International Development, Washington; World Bank. 2003 (PM): Population Association of America; (C): Northeast Universities Development Consortium; “Chronic Poverty”, University of Manchester; (W): “Insurance against poverty: Lessons from Ethiopia”, Addis Ababa; (S): Addis Ababa University; Department of Labor, Washington; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; University of Pennsylvania; World Bank 2002 (C): Poverty and growth in Africa”, University of Oxford; (S): McMaster University; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; Institute of Public Administration, Kyiv Ukraine. 2001 (PM): American Economics Association; (C): Northeast Universities Development Consortium; (S): Canadian International Development Agency, Ottawa; Dalhousie University; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; Tinbergen Institute, Amsterdam; University of Toronto; World Bank. 2000 (PM): American Economics Association; (S): Dalhousie University; International Fund for Agricultural Development, Rome; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; PROGRESA, Mexico.

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1999 (PM): Canadian Economics Association; (C): Northeast Universities Development Consortium; “Imperfect information and fieldwork in development economics”, Yale University; “Social protection and the poor”, Inter-American Development Bank, Washington D.C.; (W): World Bank Annual Research Workshop (the “Stiglitz summer workshop”); “Economic mobility and poverty dynamics in developing countries”, Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, (I was a co-organizer.); (S): Cornell University; International Fund for Agricultural Development, Rome; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Côte d'Ivoire; Princeton University; United Nations Sub-Committee on Nutrition; University of Pennsylvania; University of Toronto; World Bank. 1998 (PM): Canadian Economics Association; (C): Northeast Universities Development Consortium; (W): “Rural household dynamics, poverty and food security in Zimbabwe” Harare; (S): Catholic University, Leuven; International Fund for Agricultural Development, Rome; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Mali; PROGRESA, Mexico; Village leaders in Niafunke, Mali; World Bank. 1996 (W): “Multiple uses of irrigation water” IIMI/IFPRI, Washington D.C.; (S): Institute of Economics and Statistics, Oxford; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; London School of Economics; Saint Mary’s University, Halifax; University of Bristol. 1995 (W): ESRC Development Economics workshop, University of Leicester; (S): Cornell University; Department for International Development, UK; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; Princeton University; Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford; University of Guelph; University of Toronto; World Bank; Yale University. 1994 (PM): American Association of Agricultural Economics; (C): “Labour allocation in development”, St Antony's College, Oxford; (W): “Poverty and adjustment in Africa”, University of Nottingham; (S): DELTA - University of Paris; University of Reading. 1993 (PM): American Economics Association; Canadian Economics Association, (S): Food Studies Group, Oxford; Institute of Economics and Statistics, Oxford; McGill University; London School of Economics (twice); Namibian Institute of Social and Economic Research; University of Nottingham. 1992 (C): “Intrahousehold Resource Allocation”, IFPRI-World Bank, Washington D.C., (W): “Fertility, Family Size and Structure: Consequences for Families and Children”, Population Council; (S): Institute of Economics and Statistics, Oxford. 1991 (S): Nuffield College, Oxford; Institute of Economics and Statistics, Oxford; International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC; Princeton University; University of Nottingham; University of Pennsylvania; University of Toronto; World Bank; York University.

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1990 (W): “Making Adjustment Work: Women and Agricultural Policy Reform”, International Center for Research on Women, Washington D.C.; “Locality Based Fieldwork in Developing Countries”, Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford, (I was a co-organizer); “Analysis Plans for the Social Dimensions of Adjustment”, Woodstock, UK; (S): Nuffield College, Oxford; Institute of Economics and Statistics, Oxford; Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford; School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London; University of Warwick; World Bank. 1989 (S): Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford.

Book reviews Development and Change Journal of African Economies Eastern Africa Economic Review Journal of Development Studies Economic Journal Journal of Economic Literature REFEREEING_________________________________________________________________________ 3ie, African Economics Research Consortium, Agricultural Economics, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, American Economic Review, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, Annals of Human Biology, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, AusAID, B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy, BMC Public Health, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, Cambridge University Press, Canadian Journal of Economics, Demographic Research, Demography, Disasters, Economic and Social Research Council (UK), Economic Development and Cultural Change, Economic Journal, Economica, European Economic Review, European Journal of Development Research, Feminist Economics, Food and Nutrition Bulletin, Food Policy, Food Security, Global Development Network, Global Food Security, Governance, Grand Challenges Canada, Health Policy and Planning, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, INSP (Mexico), International Economic Review, International Food Policy Research Institute, Journal of African Economies, Journal of Agricultural Economics, Journal of Agricultural and Applied Economics, Journal of Comparative Economics, Journal of Development Economics, Journal of Development Effectiveness, Journal of Development Studies, Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, Journal of Economic Inequality, Journal of Globalization and Development, Journal of Health Economics, Journal of Human Development, Journal of Human Resources, Journal of International Development, Journal of Peace Research, Journal of Political Economy, Journal of Population Economics, Leverhulme Trust, Manchester School, Maternal and Child Nutrition, National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation, New York Academy of Sciences, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, Oxford Development Studies, Oxford Economic Papers, Oxford University Press, ODA (UK) – ESCOR, Palgrave McMillan, PLOS-Medicine, Population and Development Review, Population Studies, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Review of Economics of the Household, Science, Science Advances, Social Science and Medicine, Social Studies and Humanities Research Council (Canada), Southern Economic Journal, USAID, World Development, The World Bank, World Bank Economic Review, The World Economy.

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AWARDS, HONOURS, SPECIAL LECTURES________________________________________________ 2019 World Bank Economic Review Excellence in Refereeing Award 2017 Keynote Address, LSE Conference on Stunting: Past, present and future Keynote Address, University of Zurich Annual Conference on Child Wellbeing and

Development 2016 Keynote Address, Economics and Human Biology Annual Conference, Tubingen Germany 2016 Best of Research Award, UNICEF 2013 Best of Research Award, UNICEF 2013 Plenary Address, 30th Anniversary Conference, Canadian Foodgrains Bank 2013 Rod Ziemer Memorial Lecture, University of Georgia 2012 Inclusion in Who’s Who in America, 2012 2010 CGIAR Science Award for an Outstanding Scientific Article 2009 2008 American Agricultural Economics Association Outstanding Journal Article Award 1991-1992 Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation Fellowship, Princeton University. 1988-1989 Nuffield College Studentship, Oxford. 1987-1989 Overseas Research Studentship, Oxford. 1987-1989 Luca D'Agliano Award (Development Economics, Oxford). 1985 Toronto Association of Business Economists Award (York University). 1980 Henry Carr Scholarship (St Michael's College, University of Toronto). GRANTS RECEIVED__________________________________________________________ (I do not keep detailed track of all grants and so this is a partial list. Many of these grant proposals were written in collaboration with researchers at IFPRI and elsewhere) • “Assessing the impact of plot fragmentation on resilience”, funded by World Bank, April – June 2017. • “Effectiveness of Integrating Double Fortified Salt to Improve Iron Status and Reduce Anemia in

recipients of the PDS Program in UP, India - Baseline Survey”, funded by GAIN, September 2016 – May 2017

• “Income and experiential food security”, funded by USDA, August 2016 – August 2017 • “Evaluation of the social cash transfers pilot programme, Tigray region, Ethiopia, funded by UNICEF and

FAO, December 2011 – December 2014. • “Tackling the neglected crisis of undernutrition”, funded by the Department for International

Development, UK, June 2011 – August 2017. • “The South African Child Support Grant and its impacts”, funded by the Department of Social

Development, Government of South Africa, July 2009 – June 2012. • “Evaluation design, implementation monitoring and evaluation of vouchers and cash transfer

programs”, funded by the World Food Programme, January 2010-June 2013. • “The inter-generational transmission of cognitive abilities and early childhood development outcomes

in Guatemala”, funded by the Inter-American Development Bank, July 2009 – November 2010. • “Evaluation Study of the Impacts of the Bolsa Familia Program”, funded by UNDP for the Ministry of

Social Development, Government of Brazil, March 2009 – December 2011. • “Impact Evaluation of the Ethiopia National Food Security Program”, funded by Department for

International Development, UK, the World Bank and USAID, March 2006 – April 2009; April 2010 – December 2011 and June 2011 – October 2013; August 2014 – November 2015.

• “Developing emergency response options” funded by Office of Food for Peace, USAID, United States, November 2005 – July 2006.

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• “Analysis of the Targeting and Impact of China Rural Social Protection Programs”, funded by World Bank, January – August 2006.

• “Strengthening emergency needs assessments”, funded by World Food Programme, May 2005 – June 2007.

• “Pathways from poverty: A Multi-country study”, with collaborators at University of California – Berkeley, University of Wisconsin-Madison and Addis Ababa University, funded by BASIS CRSP, USAID, October 2004 – March 2007.

• “Collective Action and Vulnerability: An Evaluation of Local Groups and Networks in Determining Pathways out of Poverty”, funded by BMZ, August 2004 – February 2007.

• “Resource flows among three generations in Guatemala” with collaborators at Emory University, University of Pennsylvania and INCAP (Nutrition Institute for Central America and Panama), funded by NICHD – U.S. National Institutes of Health, June 2004 – June 2010.

• “Vulnerability, Shocks and Impacts in Ethiopia and Malawi: Implications for Public Action”, funded by the Department for International Development, UK, June 2004 – April 2005.

• “Education and health over the life course in Guatemala” with collaborators at Emory University, University of Pennsylvania and INCAP (Nutrition Institute for Central America and Panama), funded by NICHD – U.S. National Institutes of Health, December 2003 - December 2006.

• “Food aid fieldwork in Bangladesh and Malawi”, funded by World Food Programme, November 2003 – December 2004.

• “Food aid and pathways from poverty” funded by Office of Food for Peace, USAID, United States, July 2003 – December 2004.

• “Investing in children and youth for poverty reduction”, funded by World Bank, April 2003 – January 2004.

• “Social Safety Nets for More-Adaptive Labor Markets in Developing Countries”, funded by Department of Labor, United States, September 2001 – September 2002.

• “Is history destiny? Resources, transitions and child education attainments in Canada” with L. Lethbridge and S. Phipps, funded by Human Resources Development Canada, September 2001 – March 2002.

• “Increasing the effectiveness of Canadian aid through optimal country allocations”, funded by Canadian International Development Agency, January 2001- June 2002.

• “Early nutrition, human capital, and economic productivity” with collaborators at Emory University, University of Pennsylvania, and INCAP (Nutrition Institute for Central America and Panama), funded by Fogarty Center – U.S. National Institutes of Health, May 2001 – December 2005 and the National Science Foundation.

• “Assessing the impact of early childhood nutrition on academic achievement and adolescent height in rural Zimbabwe”, funded by World Bank, October 2000 – August 2001.

• “Dietary diversity as a food security indicator”, funded by the United States Agency for International Development through a grant to the International Food Policy Research Institute, September 2000 – January 2002.

MEDIA ___________________________________________________________________ Television appearances Al Jazeera (March 25th, May 8th and June 4th, 2008; October 15th, 2009); Business News Network (Canada); CBC Newsworld; Ethiopia Broadcasting Corporation Nightly News; Fox Cable News Radio interviews and quotations

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BBC World Service (2009, 2011); BBC Health Check Program; BBC Wales; Dave Baum, Talkzone radio; The Dave Rutherford Radio Show (Calgary, Canada); CBC Radio 1; Moncrieff with Sean Moncrieff Newstalk 106 (Ireland); National Public Radio “Marketplace” (2010, 2011 twice, 2012); National Public Radio “Weekend Edition” (2013); Radio-Canada International; Voice of America – Africa (2010, 2011, 2013) Print media and/or internet quotations and references Addis Standard; Agence-France-Press; Al Jazeera America; Al Riyadh (Saudi Arabia); Asian News International; Asia Times; the Atlantic; the Australian; Baltimore Sun; Bangladesh Daily Star; Bangladesh News24; Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha; Business Day (South Africa) (2012); Business Mirror (the Philippines); Businessweek; CartaCapital (Brazil); Catholic News Service; CBS, Atlanta; Clarin (Argentina); Christian Science Monitor; Congressional Quarterly; Daily Star (Bangladesh); Daily Telegraph (UK); Die Welt (Germany); Economic Times (India); El Diaro (Ecuador); El Pais (Uruguay); El Periodico (Guatemala); the Economist (2004, 2011, 2012, 2014); Ethiopia Herald; FoodNavigator-USA.com; Forbes; Foreign Policy; Gazeta Wyborzka (Poland); Gepflanzte Profite (Germany); Globe and Mail (Toronto); the Guardian, UK (2013, 2014); the Independent (Bangladesh); IRIN News; Islam Online; Jornal de Negoiosl (Portugal); Jakarta Post (Indonesia); Kansas City Star; La Voz del Sandinismo (Nicaragua); Mail and Guardian (South Africa); Manitoba Cooperator; Mint (India); MSNBC online; Newsweek; New York Times; O Globo (Brazil); Philippine Daily Inquirer; Philippine Times; Pretoria News; Press Trust India; Reuters; Science; Scientific American; Slate(three citations in 2012); The Citizen, South Africa; South Asia – Oneworld; The Hindu, India; The New Indian Express; The Straits Times, Singapore; SciDev.Net; Times of India; The Vanguard (Nigeria); Wall Street Journal; Washington Post; Yahoo! News online; Xinhua News Agency (China) GRADUATE STUDENTS SUPERVISED _______________________________________________________ Committee chair or principal supervisor Student Degree and Institution Gargi Wable PhD candidate, Cornell Yaeeun Han PhD candidate, Cornell Jenna Golan PhD candidate, Cornell Sylvia Blom PhD candidate, Cornell Seollee Park PhD, Cornell, 2019 Erwin Knippenberg PhD, Cornell, 2018 Liza von Grafenstein MPA, Cornell, 2017 Ibnu Widiyanto PhD., 2004, Dalhousie Lisa Roberts MDE, 2004, Dalhousie Joseph Dunlavy MDE, 2004, Dalhousie Andrea Johnson MDE, 2003, Dalhousie Nicholas Galletti MDE, 2003, Dalhousie Sarah Harrower MDE, 2001, Dalhousie Sarah van Exan MDE, 2001, Dalhousie Trudy Owens D.Phil., 1999, Oxford William Cavendish D.Phil., 1997, Oxford Philip Maggs M.Sc., 1995, Oxford Nils Riemenscheider M.Sc., 1994, Oxford

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Committee member or external reader Student Degree and Institution Katy Merkel PhD candidate, Cornell Ibukun Owoputi PhD candidate, Cornell Liza von Grafenstein PhD candidate, University of Gottingen Maria Jose Ramirez Luzuriaga

PhD candidate, Emory University

Michael Onah PhD candidate, University of Waterloo Corey O’Hara PhD, 2019, Tufts Vicky Santoso PhD, 2019, Cornell Kibrom Tafere PhD, 2017, Cornell Susana Constenla-Villoslada MS, 2019, Cornell Krista Gallie MS, 2017, Cornell Mary-Kate Wheeler MS, 2017, Cornell Dieynab Diatta MS, 2017, Cornell Sofia Trommlerova PhD, 2016, Institut de Hautes Etudes Internationale et du

Developpment, Geneva Olivia Bertelli PhD, 2016, Paris School of Economics Pinar Gunes PhD, 2014, Maryland Jeff Flory PhD, 2011, Maryland Alan Sanchez DPhil, 2011, Oxford Catherine Porter DPhil, 2009, Oxford Subha Mani PhD, 2008, USC Andrew Dillon PhD, 2008, Cornell Hans Hoogeveen PhD, 2001, VU Amsterdam

COURSES TAUGHT____________________________________________________________________ Graduate Applied Economic Development (Dalhousie), Applied Econometrics (Oxford), Economics of Food and Malnutrition (Cornell); Economic Development (Dalhousie, Toronto) Issues in Economic Development (Princeton), Microeconomics for development (Oxford), Rural Development, Poverty and Inequality (Oxford) Undergraduate Economics of Developing Countries (Oxford), Globalization and development (Dalhousie), Mathematics for economists for Prelims (Oxford), Macroeconomics for Prelims (Oxford), Macroeconomics for Economics Principles (Oxford), Macroeconomics for Economics Organization (Oxford), Microeconomics for Prelims (Oxford), Microeconomics for Economics Principles (Oxford), Principles of Microeconomics (Dalhousie), Statistical Methods for Social Sciences (Oxford), Theories of Economic Development (Dalhousie) PERSONAL DATA _____________________________________________________________________ Birth Date: 11 October 1961

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Married, two children Citizenship: Canadian. US Permanent Resident January 2, 2020