Resultados de búsqueda - Households Mexico.

  1. Labor market shocks and their impacts on work and schooling: evidence from urban Mexico por Skoufias, Emmanuel, Parker, Susan W.

    Publicado 2002
    “…The authors use individual observations from a panel of families during the period of the peso crisis in Mexico to investigate whether and how labor market shocks, as proxied by changes in the gender- and age-specific unemployment rates in the metropolitan area of the household, affect the intertemporal time allocation of adult members and children. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Artículo preliminar
  2. Evaluating the cost of poverty alleviation transfer programs: an illustration based on PROGRESA in Mexico por Coady, David, Perez, Raul, Vera-Ilamas, Hadid

    Publicado 2005
    “…We also highlight the importance of not neglecting private costs incurred by households in taking up transfers.…”
    Enlace del recurso
    Brief
  3. Evaluating the cost of poverty alleviation transfer programs: an illustration based on PROGRESA in Mexico por Coady, David, Perez, Raul, Vera-Ilamas, Hadid

    Publicado 2005
    “…We also highlight the importance of not neglecting private costs incurred by households in taking up transfers.…”
    Enlace del recurso
    Artículo preliminar
  4. A qualitative study exploring women’s empowerment in coffee cooperatives in Chiapas, Mexico por Eissler, Sarah, Rubin, Deborah, de Anda, Victoria

    Publicado 2024
    “…This study presents findings from a qualitative research study conducted in Chiapas, Mexico that is one component of a larger activity funded by the Walmart Foundation and implemented by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), titled Applying New Evidence for Women’s Empowerment (ANEW). …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Artículo preliminar
  5. Evaluating targeted cash transfer programs: a general equilibrium framework with an application to Mexico por Coady, David, Harris, Rebecca Lee

    Publicado 2004
    “…This approach reflects the view that any credible poverty alleviation strategy must have a credible financing strategy underlying it, and this need for domestic financing can have important consequences for both the level and the distribution of household incomes. To illustrate the approach, the report focuses on the recent introduction in Mexico of an innovative poverty alleviation transfer program called PROGRESA, which has been used as a prototype for similar programs that have recently been implemented in other developing countries.…”
    Enlace del recurso
    Informe técnico
  6. The impact of improved maize germplasm on poverty alleviation: the case of Tuxpeño-derived material in Mexico por Bellon, Mauricio R., Adato, Michelle, Becerril, Javier, Mindek, Dubravka

    Publicado 2003
    “…This study documents how poor small-scale farmers in lowland tropical Mexico use improved maize germplasm and how this contributes to their well-being. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Artículo preliminar
  7. The impact of improved maize germplasm on poverty alleviation: the case of Tuxpeño-derived material in Mexico por Bellon, Mauricio R., Adato, Michelle, Becerril, Javier, Mindek, Dubravka

    Publicado 2003
    “…This study documents how poor small-scale farmers in lowland tropical Mexico use improved maize germplasm and how this contributes to their well-being. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Brief
  8. The impact of improved maize germplasm on poverty alleviation: the case of Tuxpeño-derived material in Mexico por Bellon, Mauricio R., Adato, Michelle, Becerril, Javier, Mindek, Dubravka

    Publicado 2005
    “…This study documents how poor small-scale farmers in lowland tropical Mexico use improved maize germplasm and how this contributes to their well-being. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Informe técnico
  9. Targeting performance of three large-scale, nutrition-oriented, social programs in Central America and Mexico por Mesoamerica Nutrition Program Targeting Study Group

    Publicado 2002
    “…This study evaluated whether three nutrition-oriented programs in Central America and Mexico have been successful in targeting those households most vulnerable to undernutrition and poverty. for each country, nationally representative data sets were used to estimate cutoff points dividing the population into 10 equal-sized groups according to child anthropometric measurements (age-standardized height) and household income (per capita household expenditures). …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  10. A cost-effectiveness analysis of demand- and supply-side education interventions: the case of PROGRESA in Mexico por Coady, David, Parker, Susan W.

    Publicado 2004
    “…To this end, the authors evaluate PROGRESA, a large poverty‐alleviation program recently introduced in Mexico, which subsidizes education. Using double‐difference regression estimators on data collected before and after the program for randomly selected “control” and “treatment” households, the relative impacts of the demand‐ and supply‐side program components are estimated. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  11. A cost-effectiveness analysis of demand- and supply-side education interventions: the case of PROGRESA in Mexico por Coady, David, Parker, Susan W.

    Publicado 2002
    “…To this end, we evaluate the Programa Nacional de Educación, Salud y Alimentación (PROGRESA), a large poverty alleviation program recently introduced in Mexico that subsidizes education. Using double-difference regression estimators on data collected before and after the program for randomly selected control and treatment households, we estimate the relative impacts of the demand- and supply-side program components. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Brief
  12. A cost-effectiveness analysis of demand- and supply-side education interventions: the case of PROGRESA in Mexico por Coady, David, Parker, Susan W.

    Publicado 2002
    “…To this end, we evaluate the Programa Nacional de Educación, Salud y Alimentación (PROGRESA), a large poverty alleviation program recently introduced in Mexico that subsidizes education. Using double-difference regression estimators on data collected before and after the program for randomly selected control and treatment households, we estimate the relative impacts of the demand- and supply-side program components. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Artículo preliminar
  13. Farmer preferences for milpa diversity and genetically modified maize in Mexico: A latent class approach por Birol, Ekin, Villalba, Eric Rayn, Smale, Melinda

    Publicado 2009
    “…Maize originated in Mexico, where it is typically grown in association with other crops in themilpasystem. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Journal Article
  14. Farmer preferences for Milpa diversity and genetically modified maize in Mexico: A latent class approach por Birol, Ekin, Villalba, Eric Rayn, Smale, Melinda

    Publicado 2007
    “…Choice experiment data, household level social, economic and demographic data, community level economic development data, and information on milpa production characteristics, and farmers’ attitudes and perceptions with regards to GM food and crops were collected from 420 farm households across 17 communities in three states of Mexico. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Artículo preliminar
  15. A Contingent Valuation Approach to Estimating Regulatory Costs: Mexico’s Day without Driving Program por Blackman, Allen, Alpízar, Francisco, Carlsson, Fredrik, Rivera Planter, Marisol

    Publicado 2020
    “…Recent research has questioned whether programs for driving restrictions in Mexico City and several other megacities actually have environmental benefits. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Reporte técnico
  16. Ethnobotanical Knowledge of Edible Plants Amongst Children from Two Rural Communities in Western Mexico por Alondra Flores, Silvia, Cuevas Guzmán, Ramon, Olvera Vargas, Miguel, Casanoves, Fernando, Olson, Elizabeth-Anne, y 14 autores más.

    Publicado 2023
    “…We analyze children’s ethnobotanical knowledge of 107 species of edible plants in two rural locations in western Mexico and the sociodemographic factors that influence their knowledge. …”
    Enlace del recurso
    Artículo

Herramientas de búsqueda: