Similar Items: Gender difference in the long-term impact of famine
- Why does the great Chinese famine affect the male and female survivors differently? Mortality selection versus son preference
- The long-run and intergenerational impact of early exposure to the Great Chinese Famine of 1959–61 on mental health
- The intergenerational legacy of the 1959–1961 Great Chinese Famine on children’s cognitive development
- Routine growth monitoring processes in nutrition programs in India have multiple falter points with implications for quality of care
- Sins of the fathers: The intergenerational legacy of the 1959-1961 Great Chinese Famine on children's cognitive development
- Mitigating the famine in Southern Africa
Author: Mu, Ren
- Gender difference in the long-term impact of famine
- Do elected leaders in a limited democracy have real power?: Evidence from rural China
- Impact of famine during pregnancy and infancy on health in adulthood
- Migration and young child nutrition: Evidence from rural China
- Famine and overweight in China
- The role of elected and appointed village leaders in the allocation of public resources: Evidence from a low-income region in China
Author: Zhang, Xiaobo
- The Impact of COVID-19 on SMEs in China: Evidence from Two-Waves of Phone Surveys
- Happiness in the air: How does a dirty sky affect subjective well-being?
- Rural industrialization in China and India: Role of policies and institutions
- Gender difference in the long-term impact of famine
- Cluster-based Development in China: Implications for Egypt
- Growth, inequality, and poverty in rural China: the role of public investments [In Chinese]