Emma Tominey

Emma Tominey is a Professor of Economics at the University of Manchester, an affiliate of the FAIR research institute in NHH, an IZA Research Fellow, and an IFS Research Affiliate.

Dr. Tominey researches inequalities and human capital and the labour supply decisions and consequences made by mothers and fathers.

Dr. Tominey received her PhD from University College London in 2010, having completed her MSc in 2002 and her BSc in 2001 at the University of Bristol.

Pamela Giustinelli

Pamela Giustinelli is an Associate Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics and Management at the University of Padova. Prof. Giustinelli is an applied microeconometrician interested in uncertainty, heterogeneity, and measurement. Prof. Giustinelli’s research explores the economics and econometrics of individuals’ expectations and other subjective phenomena, and how expectations and perceptions shape microeconomic behavior under uncertainty. It does so by combining applied microeconomic theory, theory-based survey measurement, and applied microeconometric methods.

Rita Ginja

Rita Ginja is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Bergen. Her research interests include applied economics, labor economics and development. She has been working on the evaluation of anti-poverty programs in U.S., U.K., and Latin America. Ginja is also studying the changes in within households' allocations in responses to income shocks and to which extent these changes are transferred to children's human capital.

Donna Gilleskie

Donna Gilleskie is Professor of Economics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She studies the economics of individual decisionmaking with regard to health input demand, labor supply behavior, and health production. The approach reflected in my work involves understanding the dynamics of decisionmaking over time and the role of both observed and unobserved individual heterogeneity.

Subscribe to Applied Economics