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Habiba Djebbari

Researcher at Laval University

Publications -  32
Citations -  1894

Habiba Djebbari is an academic researcher from Laval University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Community mobilization & Collective action. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 32 publications receiving 1530 citations. Previous affiliations of Habiba Djebbari include Institute for the Study of Labor & University of Los Andes.

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Identification of peer effects through social networks.

TL;DR: Durlauf et al. as discussed by the authors considered an extended version of the linear-in-means model where interactions are structured through a social network and provided easy-to-check necessary and sufficient conditions for identification of peer effects.
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Effect of a community-led sanitation intervention on child diarrhoea and child growth in rural Mali: a cluster-randomised controlled trial.

TL;DR: The first randomised trial of community-led total sanitation (CLTS) to assess its effect on child health in Koulikoro, Mali was conducted in 2011 as discussed by the authors.
Posted ContentDOI

Heterogeneous Impacts in PROGRESA

TL;DR: This paper investigated impact heterogeneity using data from the experimental evaluation of the Mexican conditional cash transfer program PROGRESA and found evidence against the perfect positive dependence assumption that underlies the interpretation of quantile treatment effects as impacts at quantiles of the untreated outcome distribution.
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Heterogeneous impacts in PROGRESA

TL;DR: The authors investigated impact heterogeneity using data from the experimental evaluation of the Mexican conditional cash transfer program PROGRESA and found strong evidence of systematic (i.e. subgroup) variation in impacts in impacts and modest evidence of heterogeneous impacts conditional on the systematic impacts.
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Do Peers Affect Student Achievement? Evidence from Canada Using Group Size Variation

TL;DR: In this paper, the first empirical application of a new approach proposed by Lee (2007) to estimate peer effects in a linear-in-means model when individuals interact in groups was provided.