Gil Shapira : Citation Profile


Are you Gil Shapira?

World Bank Group

4

H index

3

i10 index

87

Citations

RESEARCH PRODUCTION:

4

Articles

15

Papers

RESEARCH ACTIVITY:

   13 years (2008 - 2021). See details.
   Cites by year: 6
   Journals where Gil Shapira has often published
   Relations with other researchers
   Recent citing documents: 3.    Total self citations: 0 (0 %)

MORE DETAILS IN:
ABOUT THIS REPORT:

   Permalink: http://citec.repec.org/psh1052
   Updated: 2024-04-18    RAS profile: 2021-06-23    
   Missing citations? Add them    Incorrect content? Let us know

Relations with other researchers


Works with:

Levchenko, Andrei (2)

Do, Quy-Toan (2)

Ma, Lin (2)

de Walque, Damien (2)

Authors registered in RePEc who have co-authored more than one work in the last five years with Gil Shapira.

Is cited by:

Wilson, Nicholas (7)

D'Haultfoeuille, Xavier (5)

Maurel, Arnaud (5)

Favara, Marta (4)

Sanchez, Alan (4)

Bhalotra, Sonia (4)

Anukriti, S (4)

Delavande, Adeline (4)

Bedi, Arjun (3)

Bennett, Daniel (3)

Debebe, Zelalem (3)

Cites to:

Thornton, Rebecca (5)

Krueger, Dirk (5)

Philipson, Tomas (5)

Heathcote, Jonathan (4)

Ríos-Rull, José-Víctor (4)

Friedman, Jed (3)

Argente, David (3)

Baqaee, David (2)

Aldy, Joseph (2)

Lippi, Francesco (2)

Heckman, James (2)

Main data


Where Gil Shapira has published?


Working Papers Series with more than one paper published# docs
Policy Research Working Paper Series / The World Bank6

Recent works citing Gil Shapira (2024 and 2023)


YearTitle of citing document
2023How Is Fertility Behavior in Africa Different?. (2023). Portner, Claus C. In: SocArXiv. RePEc:osf:socarx:jf9um.

Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

2023Macroeconomic Effects of COVID-19 Across the World Income Distribution. (2023). Lagakos, David ; Vuren, Mitchell ; Kim, Minki ; Alon, Titan. In: IMF Economic Review. RePEc:pal:imfecr:v:71:y:2023:i:1:d:10.1057_s41308-022-00182-8.

Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

2023Optimal interventions in networks during a pandemic. (2023). Tondji, Jean-Baptiste ; Tchuente, Guy ; Pongou, Roland. In: Journal of Population Economics. RePEc:spr:jopoec:v:36:y:2023:i:2:d:10.1007_s00148-022-00916-y.

Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

Works by Gil Shapira:


YearTitleTypeCited
2021The Intergenerational Mortality Tradeoff of COVID-19 Lockdown Policies In: NBER Working Papers.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
paper10
2021The Intergenerational Mortality Tradeoff of COVID-19 Lockdown Policies.(2021) In: Policy Research Working Paper Series.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 10
paper
2008How Beliefs about HIV Status Affect Risky Behaviors: Evidence from Malawi In: PIER Working Paper Archive.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
paper46
2008How Beliefs About HIV Status affect Risky Behaviors: Evidence From Malawi, Second Version.(2008) In: PIER Working Paper Archive.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 46
paper
2010How Beliefs about HIV Status Affect Risky Behaviors: Evidence from Malawi, Second Version.(2010) In: PIER Working Paper Archive.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 46
paper
2010How Beliefs about HIV Status Affect Risky Behaviors: Evidence from Malawi, Fifth Version.(2010) In: PIER Working Paper Archive.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 46
paper
2011How Beliefs about HIV Status Affect Risky Behaviors: Evidence from Malawi, Sixth Version.(2011) In: PIER Working Paper Archive.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 46
paper
2011How Beliefs about HIV Status Affect Risky Behaviors: Evidence from Malawi, Seventh Version.(2011) In: PIER Working Paper Archive.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 46
paper
2014HOW BELIEFS ABOUT HIV STATUS AFFECT RISKY BEHAVIORS: EVIDENCE FROM MALAWI.(2014) In: Journal of Applied Econometrics.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 46
article
2009How Beliefs about HIV Status Affect Risky Behaviors: Evidence from Malawi1, Second Version In: PIER Working Paper Archive.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
paper0
2009How Beliefs about HIV Affect Risky Behaviors: Evidence from Malawi In: 2009 Meeting Papers.
[Citation analysis]
paper0
2015HIV Testing, Behavior Change, and the Transition to Adulthood in Malawi In: Economic Development and Cultural Change.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
article6
2014HIV testing, behavior change, and the transition to adulthood in Malawi.(2014) In: Policy Research Working Paper Series.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 6
paper
2017How Subjective Beliefs about HIV Infection Affect Life-Cycle Fertility: Evidence from Rural Malawi In: Journal of Human Resources.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
article22
2013How subjective beliefs about HIV infection affect life-cycle fertility : evidence from rural Malawi.(2013) In: Policy Research Working Paper Series.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
This paper has nother version. Agregated cites: 22
paper
2017Effects of performance incentives for community health worker cooperatives in Rwanda In: Policy Research Working Paper Series.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
paper1
2017The effects of in-kind demand-side conditional transfers for improving uptake of maternal and child health services in Rwanda In: Policy Research Working Paper Series.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
paper0
2019Inequality in the Quality of Health Services : Wealth, Content of Care, and Price of Antenatal Consultations in the Democratic Republic of Congo In: Policy Research Working Paper Series.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
paper0
2018Going beyond incentivizing formal health providers: Evidence from the Rwanda Community Performance?Based Financing program In: Health Economics.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
article2

CitEc is a RePEc service, providing citation data for Economics since 2001. Sponsored by INOMICS. Last updated March, 4 2024. Contact: CitEc Team