Watch and listen to the Department's research and insight into the coronavirus pandemic
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A UCL Minds podcast featuringÌýProfessor Sir Richard Blundell. Ìý This week, we speak to two UCL experts to find out what we can do to help mitigate the long-term harms of coronavirus and reduce the risk of future pandemics. In this episode, we ask: how long will the impacts of COVID-19 last - and will we start seeing many more pandemics in future? | AÌýwebinar hosted by theÌýInternational Science Council, featuringÌýWendy CarlinÌý January 2021 Ìý This not-to-be missed webinar highlights some of the pressing matters on rethinking economic science and can now be watched online. The webinar fostered insightful discussion from leading economic thinkers on today’s global challenges, and would benefit teachers and professors of economic science, or anyone working in the field of economics, think tanks, intergovernmental agencies and policy-making. |
A UCL Economics podcast featuring Ramin Nassehi andÌýFabien Postel-Vinay. December 2020 Ìý Our academics talkÌýabout the impact of school closures on the spread of coronavirus in Germany, covering the exciting research by Uta Schönberg, Kirill Borusyak and Clara von Bismarck-Osten. | A UCL Economics podcast featuring Ramin Nassehi andÌýFabien Postel-Vinay. December 2020 Ìý Ramin talks to Professor Fabien Postel-Vinay (UCL) about his research on work and mental health. |
| ÌýÌýA podcast featuringÌýÌý August 2020 Listen to Dr. Imran Rasul as he joins CERP Podcasts to talk about his research on the impact of school closures on young girls during the Ebola epidemic in Sierra Leone. He discusses the findings and their implications on policy making during the pandemic in the context of Pakistan. Dr. Imran Rasul is Professor of Economics at University College London. He is co-director ESRC Centre for the Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy (CPP), Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) and Research Programme Director, Firms Portfolio, International Growth Centre (IGC). Ìý |
ÌýÌýÌý A podcast byÌý,ÌýÌýandÌýÌý Ìý | ÌýAÌýpodcast withÌýToby Shannan andÌýWendy CarlinÌý
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ÌýÌý An event withÌýÌýandÌý At this event, IFS researchers will discuss how COVID-19 has interacted with existing inequalities and consider the potential long-term legacy of the pandemic on inequality. | ÌýA conversation with Luis Garicano andÌýWendy CarlinÌý Ìý Ìý Ìý InÌýthisÌýnewÌýepisodeÌýofÌý​ I talk with Wendy Carlin, professor of Economics at the University College of London, Ph.D. in Oxford. She is a fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research, an expert advisor to the UK Treasury and a founderÌýof CORE, an organization that promotes a new approach to teaching economics. Her research focusesÌýon macroeconomics, institutions and the economics of transition. We talk about economics paradigms and the role of civil society. |
ÌýÌýA Santa Fe Institute Multidisciplinary Webinar,ÌýfeaturingÌýWendy CarlinÌýand Sam BowlesÌý Ìý In this hour-long virtual discussion, Sam Bowles and Wendy Carlin will explore how the pandemic could change our economic narrative, expressing new everyday understandings of how the economy works and how it should work. | ÌýÌýA discussion withÌýÌýandÌýÌý Ìý Elias Papaioannou, Professor of Economics at London Business School and Academic Director of the Wheeler Institute for Business and Development was joined in conversation with Imran Rasul, Professor of Economics at University College London, to discuss how public health authorities can effectively relay information during the coronavirus pandemic. |
How will COVID-19 change the way nations govern their economies and societies?A podcast withÌýWendy Carlin, Gabriella Conti,Claudio Radaelli,ÌýMike Seiferling andÌýJennifer Hudson. May 2020 In this podcast, our speakers will address several important issues and questions, such as: whether we will see an overarching paradigm shift in economic policymaking; what patterns of learning among policymakers we can expect; how national health systems will respond; what role civil society will play in post-lockdown life; and what new roles can we expect for international organisations, such as the WHO, the IMF and the World Bank. | Ìý |
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