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Sonya Krutikova
Associate Professor of Economics, University of Manchester; Deputy Research Director, Institute for Fiscal Studies.
Sonya Krutikova is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Manchester and Deputy Research Director at the Institute for Fiscal Studies.
Her main research interests are in the determinants of skill acquisition among children and young people living in poverty, as well as more broadly the mechanisms through which childhood conditions manifest in child development and outcomes. Her recent work focuses on the role of home and school factors in explaining the evolution of gaps in cognitive skills and school attainment among children from poorer and better off backgrounds in developing countries.
Sonya is additionally involved with on-going research in the following areas: the effects of early childhood health, poverty and maternal well-being on health and cognitive development; measurement of development in specific cognitive domains in large-scale surveys; and evaluation of nutrition supplementation and cognitive stimulation programs targeting young children and/or their mothers in a number of contexts including Colombia and Nepal.
Recent work by Sonya Krutikova
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Preschool quality and child development: Evidence from Colombia
Interventions that only provide material resources to preschools may fail to achieve any benefits, and have unintended negative consequences, if teachers have insufficient training
Published 24.01.23
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Gender norms, violence and adolescent girls’ trajectories: Evidence from India
Changing the attitudes and behaviours of those enforcing restrictive societal norms is critical for achieving meaningful improvements in women’s wellbeing
Published 24.10.22
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Early childhood development policies: The evidence and the research agenda
Effective education programmes can be implemented in low-income settings, but the quality of service and adapting it to the local context are crucial
Published 07.09.17