Recently
I presented work on simulating inheritances using survey data and microsimulations at the 2024 annual meeting of the Population Association of America.
You can find the slides here and the working paper here (DOI:10.4054/MPIDR-WP-2024-008).
With Wenqing Qian (and a few others), we published our research on how Weibo’s audience demographics (as Weibo understands them) compare to the districts they live in Weibo localizes them in: “Demographic inequalities in digital spaces in China: the case of Weibo.”
Wenqing is a Ph.D. student at the University of Michigan. You should follow her.
About me
I am a research scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in the Department of Digital and Computational Demography.
My staff page is here.
I obtained a Ph.D. in sociology from Northwestern University and the Centre de rechere sur les inegalités sociales (formerly the Observatoire du changement social) at Sciences Po Paris.
My dissertation research analyzed financial transfers from parents to adult children in twenty European countries. I used the Survey of Ageing, Health and Retirement in Europe to examine how the number and gender of sibs influences transfers, which events in the children’s lives (unemployment, divorce, childbirth) trigger transfers, and how these transfers evolve over time.
I made something shiny for my students once.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
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