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Adel Daoud

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  55
Citations -  850

Adel Daoud is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Scarcity & Population. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 43 publications receiving 635 citations. Previous affiliations of Adel Daoud include Linköping University & University of Cambridge.

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Bad Governance and Poor Children: A Comparative Analysis of Government Efficiency and Severe Child Deprivation in 68 Low- and Middle-income Countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use survey micro-data from 68 low and middle-income countries (N = 2,120,734) measuring deprivation of seven basic human needs (safe water, food, food sanitation, shelter, education, health care, and information) among children.
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Examining the changing profile of undernutrition in the context of food price rises and greater inequality.

TL;DR: The hypothesis is that increases in food prices during the crisis contributed to an increase in inequality, which may have resulted in concurrent increases in the prevalence of more damaging forms of undernutrition amongst poorer children.
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What Is the Association between Absolute Child Poverty, Poor Governance, and Natural Disasters? A Global Comparison of Some of the Realities of Climate Change.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the development agencies should take the negative effects of natural disasters on child poverty are independent of a country´s institutional efficiency and to articulate more equitable global policies to protect the most vulnerable, specifically children.
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Impact of International Monetary Fund programs on child health.

TL;DR: It is found that, although IMF programs do not correlate directly with child health indicators, they reduce the protective effect of parental education on child health, especially in rural areas, and have a mixed impact across the five dimensions of urban child health.
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Robbins and Malthus on Scarcity, Abundance, and Sufficiency: The Missing Sociocultural Element

TL;DR: The problem of scarcity is often talked about, but it is rarely clearly defined as discussed by the authors, which is due to ignorance of the sociocultural causal underpinnings of scarcity, abundance and sufficiency.