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Creating an environment for research in the developing world

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PEP Standard Model

PEP Standard Model (prepared by Bernard Decaluwé, André Lemelin, Hélène Maisonnave and Véronique Robichaud)

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Software

  • Natural Resource Database Software (NRDB), by Richard Alexander
  • Census and Survey Processing System (CSPro), by the US Census Bureau
  • DASP
    (Distributional Analysis Stata Package)
  • DAD Software
    (Distributional Analysis/Analyse Distributive)
  • GAMS Software
    MPIA-funded researchers are asked to contact pep@ecn.ulaval.ca
    for information on obtaining the PEP licence for GAMS at a subsidised rate.
  • GAMS Mailing list
    GAMS users worldwide use a mailing list name GAMS-L to exchange information about GAMS
  • GAMS Program for Balancing a SAM, by Fofana I, Lemelin A and Cockburn J.
    • Document (PDF)
    • Document (PDF) - GDX version
    • Program (GAMS)
    • Program (GAMS)- GDX version
    • Example of a simple SAM (EXCEL)
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Resources for publishing in journals

Basic guidelines for preparing an external publication

A journal article is a powerful tool for disseminating research. However, to get research published, read and fully understood, it is essential to present all information in a clear and structured manner to ensure that the reader can easily understand and appreciate your contributions.  Here we present some guidelines that may help PEP authors to improve the presentation of their papers.
 
Clarity of presentation
It is important to clearly explain and motivate the research issue and the methods of analysis used. The reader should not be distracted by less relevant information. This first step is decisive to attract the interest of the reader… and the evaluator.
 
Emphasizing the contribution of the paper relative to existing studies
To convince the reader of the valuable scientific contribution of the paper, authors should clearly indicate in their introduction what distinguishes their study from existing studies and how this is important in terms of scientific contributions. These contributions may be theoretical, methodological or empirical in nature.
 
Structure of the paper
An important aspect of presentation is the structuring of information into clearly defined sections. For instance, a typical structure for empirical research is the following:

  • Introduction
  • Theoretical framework
  • Application and results
  • Conclusions
  • References

One must keep in mind that poor structure may create confusion and obscure messages.
 
Writing Style
Even if the issues are relevant and important and the paper is well structured, a clear writing style is indispensable to a well presented paper. This task requires intensive effort and numerous revisions (by the authors and by colleagues if possible) in order to improve the structure of presentation of the paper, each section and each sentence.  
 
Support from PEP internal and external resource persons
PEP can help its researchers either through direct support from resource persons on its staff or by putting them into contact with external resource persons with specific expertise in their area of research. Whereas research conducted up until the approval of the final report must be conducted exclusively by the team itself, PEP is open to collaboration with other researchers, including researchers based in developed countries, if the team believes that this will improve their chances of publishing in a well-reputed journal. The decision is up to the members of the team itself. In all cases, PEP will continue to provide technical and scientific support to facilitate the publication based on PEP-funded research.

Discussion papers and articles for authors

  • Pantelis Kalaitzidakis & Theofanis P Mamuneas & Thanasis Stengos, 2001. "Rankings of Academic Journals and Institutions in Economics," Discussion Papers in Economics 01/8, Department of Economics, University of Leicester.
  • John Creedy, 2005. "From Manuscript to Publication: A Brief Guide for Economists," Department of Economics - Working Papers Series 934, The University of Melbourne.

 

Some journals that publish on PEP themes

 


Econlit

Title of the journal

1

*

African Development Review/Revue Africaine de Developpement

2

 

African Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics 

3

 

African Journal of Economic Policy

4

*

Applied Health Economics and Health Policy

5

*

ASEAN Economic Bulletin

6

*

Asian Development Review

7

*

Asian Economic Journal

8

*

Asia-Pacific Development Journal

9

*

B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy: Advances in Economic Analysis and Policy

10

*

Bangladesh Development Studies

11

*

CEPAL Review

12

 

China Agricultural Economic Review

13

*

China and World Economy

14

*

China Economic Review

15

*

Community Development Journal

16

*

Developing Economies

17

*

Development Southern Africa

18

*

Economía: Journal of the Latin American and Caribbean Economic Association

19

*

Economic Development Quarterly

20

*

Economics of Education Review

21

*

Economie Appliquée

22

*

Environment and Development Economics

23

*

Environment, Development and Sustainability

24

*

Economie et Prévision

25

*

Feminist Economics

26

*

Indian Development Review

27

*

International Journal of Applied Econometrics and Quantitative Studies

28

*

Journal of African Economies

29

 

Journal of Development Effectiveness

30

*

Journal of Development Studies

31

*

Journal of Human Development

32

*

Journal of International Development

33

 

The Journal of International Trade and Diplomacy

34

 

The International Journal of Microsimulation

35

*

Journal of Regional Analysis and Policy

36

*

Malaysian Journal of Economic Studies

37

*

Nigerian Journal of Economic and Social Studies

38

*

Philippine Review of Economics

39

*

Review of African Political Economy

40

Review of Applied Economics

41

*

Revue d'Économie du Développement

42

*

South African Journal of Economics

43

 

The International Journal of Microsimulation

44

 

The JOURNAL of African Development

45

 

The Journal of International Trade and Diplomacy

46

*

World Development

 

Update your PEP publication info

To assist us in the process of publication, PEP project leaders are kindly requested to keep us updated concerning their activities related to the publication of their PEP-funded research. To this end, please fill out, save and send the form below (available in Word or PDF format) to: pep@ecn.ulaval.ca

  • PUB_INFO_FORM (Word Format)
  • PUB_INFO_FORM (PDF Format)
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IDRC Literature services

This site provides access to online literature search tools and online access to a huge number of top scholarly journals (with downloadable articles). All members of teams who currently benefit from a PEP or IDRC/MIMAP grant are eligible to receive access to IDRC's Research Databases.  The databases collection of the IDRC Library is a resource intended to support the research activities of grant recipients by providing access to a wealth of scholarly literature - a portion of which is full text. 

To access the research databases, you must have at a minimum, Windows 95 and Internet Explorer, version four. More information about these databases and other services provided through the IDRC Library is available at the following webpage: web.idrc.ca/en/ev-45342-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html.

These services are available to researchers over the full duration of their research project. For those who are interested and who have not already received a username and password, please submit an updated list of the names and email addresses of the persons from your research team who will use the service. For PEP grant recipients, this information should be transmitted to the PEP secretariat (pep@ecn.ulaval.ca). The names of these people should accord with those identified as research team members in your proposal document. This information will be transmitted to the IDRC librarian, who will provide each team member with a username and password, and she will notify you directly as soon as this has been accomplished. She will also elaborate on the full range of services offered through the Library.


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GDN Literature services

GDN supports the generation and sharing of local social science research by providing a number of web and email based services to help researchers produce, share and disseminate their work. This page gives an overview to help researchers make the most of these services.

  • Access to Data: Through the GDN Data initiative, researchers in low and middle income countries can get access to datasets to support the quality of their research and analysis.
  • Director of Free online Journals
  • Journal service: Access to journals for researchers working in low and middle income countries.
  • Funding Information: A range of funding information services carrying up-to-date news of grants, fellowships and other funding opportunities, specially selected for relevance to social science researchers.
  • Toolkits: GDNet produces toolkits to share knowledge and experience on key topics. Providing practical, hands-on advice compiled from a range of sources from best practice literature to interviews with individuals experienced in that area, each has been specially written to cover areas of particular interest to researchers in developing countries.
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Sites with free downloadable papers

  • SSRN: The Social Science Research Network (SSRN) is a publicly accessible site that gathers academic discussion papers and forthcoming publications (30,000 abstracts and 15,000 downloadable papers) from a huge number of first-rate economics departments and research centres (NEBR, CEPR, IZA, etc.). This is a great site to get the very latest research papers. As they are extremely recent, their bibliographies are excellent starting points for a literature survey. The search facility is straightforward. You can also subscribe to receive email updates on specific subject areas but there may be a fee for this.
  • World Bank: This site includes World Bank Working Papers and has a straightforward search facility. Once again, many papers can be downloaded free of charge directly from the site.
  • REPEC: This sites groups together a number of search tools, including IDEAS, which includes roughly 130,000 articles and working papers, many of which can be downloaded, plus many software programs and add-ons. The site also includes WOPEC, which contains 36,000 downloadable papers.
  • ELDIS: This site contains a search facility for obtaining documents, web sites and assorted information on development issues.
  • NBER: The NBER publishes a huge working paper series (close to 9000 papers) in all fields of economics. Access is free for most developing countries upon written (email) request.
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Sites with downloadable articles for subscribers

  • JSTOR: This site allows subscribers to download articles from 13 top economic journals (AER; Econometrica; JEL; JEP; Journal of Industrial Economics; Journal of Money, Credit and Banking; Journal of Political Economy; QJE; Review of Economic Studies; Review of Economics and Statistics) with a three- to five-year lag depending on the journal (i.e. you can download all publications before 1997 from the Review of Economics Studies).
  • PROQUEST: This site provides subscribers access to summaries of articles from over 8000 publications, many of which can be downloaded.
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Sites with free literature search tools

  • Google Scholar enables you to search specifically for scholarly literature, including peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts and technical reports from all broad areas of research. Use Google Scholar to find articles from a wide variety of academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories and universities, as well as scholarly articles available across the web.
  • SAGE: This is a database of studies using applied general equilibrium models. It was created to disseminate studies AGE models built throughout the world and provide students, researchers, professors and civil servants with a quick and powerful tool for accessing references to AGEs according to the country studied, the subject of analysis and the specific approaches used. It provides modelers with references to over 600 published and unpublished studies from throughout the world. References indicate the studies' title, authors, year of publication, source (name of journal, etc.), document type, keywords and the abstract or resume if available. The database may be searched with a combination of JEL keywords (listed in an instruction page) and/or author names.
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Sites with literature search tools for subscribers

  • ECONLIT: This is an excellent search tool for finding economics papers that covers almost all economics journals.
  • Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI): This is also an excellent search tool for finding economics papers covering most economic journals. It has the added advantage of allowing searches by citations so that starting from a classic (oft-cited) paper, you can trace research forward to see who has done more recent research on the issue.
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Sources of Poverty Data

  • S E D L A C - Socio-Economic Database for Latin America and the Caribbean
  • Ethnicity and the Millennium Development Goals
  • The International Household Survey Network (IHSN) has established a web-based Central Survey and Census Catalog, which provides users with access to selected survey and census metadata, documentation and datasets. Access to underlying electronic files is enforced and controlled according to each official depositor’s policy.
  • The World Bank has developed the Development Data Platform (DDP), which provides information on existing household survey datasets and their characteristics. For World Bank internal use only, the Development Data Platform (DDP) provides access and basic analytical tools for both time series (macro) and survey (micro) data on a wide range of development topics; and includes metadata, documentation and related datasets. With DDP’s powerful features, users can prepare and publish web reports, charts and maps.
  • The Living Standards Measurement Survey (LSMS) web site lists all LSMS surveys conducted so far and gives information on how to obtain the data. LSMS surveys collect household data that can be used to assess household welfare, understand household behavior, and evaluate the effects of various government policies on living conditions. Data on many dimensions of household well-being are generally collected (consumption, income, savings, employment, health, education, fertility, nutrition, housing and migration).
  • The Africa Household Survey Databank, the Eastern Europe and Central Asia Household Survey Databank, and the Latin America and Caribbean Household Survey Databank provide access to information and files for household surveys conducted in those regions. The Poverty Monitoring Survey Database provides access to household surveys conducted around the globe. The information available in these repositories is composed of descriptive survey, dataset and documentation metadata and their related electronic files.
  • The Program for the Improvement of Surveys and the Measurement of Living Conditions in Latin America and the Caribbean (ISLC/MECOVI) aims at improving data quality and availability in terms of their scope, coverage, reliability, and, most importantly, their relevance for policy making. The program was implemented in 1997 by the Inter-American Development Bank together with the World Bank, ECLAC and country governments including those of Argentina, Bolivia, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Paraguay and Peru.
  • Demographic and Health Surveys (DHSs) are often used to look at health and education indicators. You can find information on how to access the datasets on the DHS web site.
  • Household Expenditure and Income Data for Transitional Economies (HEIDE) (5.4Mb .zip file) is a database of household expenditure and income data from recent surveys. It was created by a World Bank research team as part of a project analyzing poverty and social assistance in transition economies.
  • Check out also the Inequality around the World website, maintained by Branko Milanovic.
  • Other World Bank datasets available free of charge can be found on the Poverty World Bank Research Datasets page.
  • The Mexican National Survey for Household Income and Expenditures (ENIGH), National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI), Mexico
  • The Mexican National Survey for Household Income and Expenditures is a biennial survey that has been conducted since 1984 on the amount and structure of Mexican household income. The data for 2000–2006 is available from the INEGI web site (Spanish) under the heading “Encuesta nacional de ingresos y gastos de los hogares”. The National Council for the Evaluation of Social Development Policy (CONEVAL) provides on their web site (Spanish) the Stata programs for the computations corresponding to reports on the rural and urban poverty estimation.
  • African househod surveys used in DAD illustrations 
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Sources of Research Funding

  • Poverty and Economic Policy (PEP) Research Network: www.pep-net.org (see "Call for Proposals")
  • African Economic Research Network (AERC): www.aercafrica.org
  • CUTS Institute for Regulation and Competition: www.cuts.in
  • Global Development Network (GDN) Awards: www.gdnet.org (see also their list of funding opportunities at: www.gdnet.org/middle.php?oid=248)
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Research Institutions

  • African Economic Research Consortium (AERC)
  • Arab Planning Institute (API)
  • Bureau for Economic Research and Development (BREAD, Harvard)
  • Centre d'Études et de Coopération Internationale (CECI)
  • Centre de Recherche et Développement Économique (CRDE)
  • Centre for the Study of African Economies (CSAE)
  • Centro de Estudios Distributivos, Laborales y Sociales - Universidad Nacional de La Plata (CEDLAS)
  • Childhood Poverty Research and Policy Centre (CHIP)
  • Chronic Poverty Research Centre (CPRC)
  • Département et Laboratoire d'Economie Théorique et Appliquée (DELTA)
  • Développement et Insertion Internationale (DIAL)
  • Equity and Growth through Economic Research (EAGER-USAID)
  • The ELDIS Gateway to Development Information (ELDIS)
  • Global Development Network (GDN)
  • Grupo de Analisis para el Desarrollo (GRADE)
  • Human Development and Capability Association (HDCA)
  • Impact Evaluation Network (IEN)
  • International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
  • International Child Development Centre (Innocenti ICDC-Unicef)
  • Institut National de Sciences Économiques et d'Administration (INSEA) - Maroc
  • Oxford Poverty and Human Devolpment Initiative (OPHI)
  • South African Regional Poverty Network (SARPN)
  • PEP-GTAP South Asian Network of Economic Modelers (SANEM)
  • Vietnam Economic Research Network (VERN)
  • World Institute for Development Economics Research (WIDER)
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Websites for Economists

  • About Economics
  • Dr. T's EconLinks.com
  • INOMICS
  • Home Pages of Economists with Interests in Applied Microeconomics and Development
  • Resources for Economists on the Internet
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Modeling pages

  • Ecomod: International network of modelers
  • EPIAM: Tools for the Ex Ante Poverty Impact Assessment of Macroeconomic Policies
  • Excel link : Program to import/export data from Excel within GAMS
  • General Algebraic Modeling System (GAMS) : Site for users of GAMS software
  • Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP): GTAP's goal is to improve the quality of quantitative analysis of global economic issues within an economy-wide framework
  • Intereconomics : Site that has some interesting informations for CGE modelers
  • MAMS: Maquette for MDG Simulations
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International Institutions

  • International Poverty Centre (IPC)
  • FAO Pro-Poor Livestock Policy Initiative
  • International Labor Organization (ILO)
  • Unicef
  • World Bank:Poverty Net
  • World Bank LSMS (household surveys)
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National Aid Agencies

  • Centre for International Development Agency (CIDA)
  • International Development Research Centre (IDRC)
  • The Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID)
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PEP training material

  • CBMS training material
  • MPIA training material
  • PIERI training material
  • PMMA training material
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Related Events Outside PEP

See Related Events Outside PEP to see News, Upcoming Conferences and Training Activities, Recurring Events, Sources of Research Funding, New books, Job openings, past events...

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