Anna Aizer
Assistant Professor of Economics & Public Policy
Brown University
Department of Economics
64 Waterman Street
Providence, RI 02912
(401) 863-9529
aizer@brown.edu
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Recent
Research (see research page for abstracts and links to full
papers)
Working Papers
·
Poverty, Stress
and the Intergenerational Transmission of Human Capital (April
2009) with Laura Stroud and Stephen Buka
·
Peer Effects,
Institutions and Human Capital Accumulation: The Externalities of ADD (April 2009) under review
·
Wages, Violence and
Health in the Household (December 2008) Revise and
Resubmit AER. Older version NBER #13494
Published/Forthcoming
·
Love,
Hate and Murder: Commitment Devices in Violent Relationships (with
Pedro Dal Bó) Journal
of Public Economics, forthcoming
·
Neighborhood
Violence and Urban Youth in “The Problems of Disadvantaged Youth: An Economic Perspective”
Jonathon Gruber, editor, forthcoming
·
Public Health Insurance,
Program Take-up and Child Health, Review of Economics and Statistics, August 2007
·
Does Managed
Care Hurt Health? Evidence from Medicaid Mothers (with Janet Currie and Enrico Moretti) Review of Economics and
Statistics, August 2007
·
The Impact of Child Support
on Fertility, Parental Investments and Child Well-being
(with Sara McLanahan) Journal of Human Resources, Winter 2006
·
Access to Care, Provider Choice and
the Infant Health Gradient (with Adriana Lleras-Muney and Mark Stabile)
American Economic Review Papers and
Proceedings, May 2005
·
Home Alone: Supervision After
School and Child Behavior, Journal
of Public Economics, 2004
·
Networks or Neighborhoods?
Interpreting Correlations in the Use of Publicly-Funded Maternity Care in
California (with Janet Currie) Journal
of Public Economics, 2004
·
Low Take-up in Medicaid: Does
Outreach Matter and For Whom? American Economic Review Papers
and Proceedings, May 2003
Works
in Progress
·
Maternal Smoking, the Gradient and Child Health: Evidence from the
Publication of the First Surgeon General’s Report on Smoking and Health
·
Juvenile Incarceration & Adult Outcomes:
Evidence from Randomly-Assigned Judges (with Joe
Doyle)