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The Harvard Center for International Development is home to faculty affiliates from each school at Harvard University, working across sectors in developing nations around the world.

Faculty research is published in a wide range of academic and policy venues and can be found through the feed and filters below. Select faculty research papers are highlighted in our Faculty Research Insights series on our blog, CID Voices.

CID working papers published by Harvard faculty, graduate students, and research fellows prior to 2024 can be found here

Showing results 151 - 160 of 581

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Stéphane Verguet
Vol. 6, Issue 11
Importance: Economic growth may reduce childhood malnutrition through improvements of several contributing factors, but the empirical evidence is mixed. Identifying the most…
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Rembrand Koning
Working Paper No. 724-418
Chai Point was an Indian food and beverage company focused on chai. It started in 2010 as a retail store network but soon expanded to corporate offices by developing an IoT-…
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David Bloom
Vol. 8, Issue 1
Recent research has documented a wide range of health, economic, and social benefits conferred by vaccination, beyond the direct reductions in morbidity, mortality, and future…
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Michael Woolcock
Working Paper No. 10051
Responding effectively and with professional integrity to the many challenges of public administration requires recognizing that access to more and better quantitative data is…
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Sebastian Bauhoff
Vol. 8, Issue 10
Introduction Many children in low-income and middle-income countries fail to receive any routine vaccinations. There is little evidence on how to effectively and efficiently…
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Aisha Khizar Yousafzai
Vol. 65, Issue 5, Pages 694-709
Background: Multicomponent interventions are needed to address the various co-occurring risks that compromise early child nutrition and development. We compared the independent…
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David Canning
Background Studies have highlighted potential non-contraceptive benefits from women’s use of hormonal, reversible contraceptive methods. Given the physiological pathways through…
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Aisha Khizar Yousafzai
Vol. 152, Issue 4
Objectives: The majority of the evidence about the effectiveness of early parenting and nutrition interventions pertains to 1 targeted index child in a given household. We…