Working Paper: Drinking-Water and drinking water: Trajectories of Provision and Consumption in the UK, Taiwan and Delhi

14 05 2012
Pre-industrial configurations of water and sewage (c) 2012 University of Essex

Pre-industrial configurations of water and sewage in the UK (c) 2012 University of Essex

This paper, Drinking-Water and drinking water: Trajectories of Provision and Consumption in the UK, Taiwan and Delhiby Mark Harvey considers the economic sociology and political economy of drinking water infrastructures in the UK, Delhi and Taiwan to show how the emergence of all-purpose (including drinking) water was the outcome of long and varied historical processes, involving major changes in both systems of provision and patterns of consumption. Read the rest of this entry »





CRESI working paper: A Framework for Local Policy Response and a Proposal for a Resilience Index

3 05 2012
Resilience Model (c) University of Essex 2012

Resilience Model (c) University of Essex 2012

This paper, “Economic Analysis of Resilience: A Framework for Local Policy Response Based on New Case Studies“, written by Pierre Régibeau (Imperial College, London and CRA International) and Katharine Rockett (University of Essex) takes a recent set of case studies on resilience of ecocultures to form the basis for a critical review of the resilience literature and the development of a proposal for a novel resilience index.

The paper notes the diversity of definitions of resilience and the confusion this creates in implementing resilience studies and develop a synthesis view that establishes a framework for defining resilience in an implementable way. This framework emphasises the importance of defining the source of and magnitude of shocks as part of the definition.

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Working Paper: Estimating Small Area Income Deprivation: An Iterative Proportional Fitting Approach

31 10 2011

Small area estimation and in particular the estimation of small area income deprivation has potential value in the development of new or alternative components of multiple deprivation indices. These new approaches enable the development of income distribution threshold based as opposed to benefit count based measures of income deprivation and so enable the alignment of regional and national measures such as the Households Below Average Income with small area measures. This paper briefly reviews a number of approaches to small area estimation before describing in some detail an iterative proportional fitting based spatial microsimulation approach. This approach is then applied to the estimation of small area HBAI rates at the small area level in Wales in 2003-5. The paper discusses the results of this approach, contrasts them with contemporary ‘official’ income deprivation measures for the same areas and describes a range of ways to assess the robustness of the results.

A version of this paper has been accepted for inclusion as a chapter in: Tanton, R., & Edwards, K . (2012) Spatial Microsimulation: A Reference Guide for Users, Springer.








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