Barry R. Chiswick focuses on Immigration, Demographic economics, Labour economics, Human capital and Foreign born. Barry R. Chiswick has included themes like Social policy, Occupational mobility, Country of origin, Educational attainment and Socioeconomic status in his Immigration study. His Demographic economics research includes elements of First language, Ethnic group, Refugee and Linguistic distance.
His Labour economics study incorporates themes from Endogeneity, Ceteris paribus and Census. His studies in Human capital integrate themes in fields like Occupational prestige and Current Population Survey. His Foreign born study incorporates themes from Disadvantage and Americanization.
His primary areas of investigation include Immigration, Demographic economics, Labour economics, Human capital and Census. His study of Foreign born is a part of Immigration. His Demographic economics research includes elements of Developed country, Economic growth, Unemployment, First language and Judaism.
He works mostly in the field of Judaism, limiting it down to topics relating to Demography and, in certain cases, Ethnic group, as a part of the same area of interest. His Labour economics research incorporates themes from Socioeconomic status and Distribution. Barry R. Chiswick undertakes multidisciplinary investigations into Human capital and Transferability in his work.
His primary scientific interests are in Immigration, Demographic economics, Human capital, American Community Survey and Demography. The study incorporates disciplines such as Developed country, Occupational prestige, Labour economics, English proficiency and Linguistic distance in addition to Immigration. His research in Demographic economics intersects with topics in Judaism, Development economics, Census and Unemployment.
His work investigates the relationship between Human capital and topics such as Language proficiency that intersect with problems in Incentive. His American Community Survey study also includes
Immigration, Demographic economics, Labour economics, Human capital and Linguistic distance are his primary areas of study. He integrates several fields in his works, including Immigration and Residence. Barry R. Chiswick has researched Demographic economics in several fields, including Economic growth, European Social Survey, Religious pluralism and Economics of religion.
His Human capital research focuses on subjects like Language proficiency, which are linked to Economics of language, Matching and Investment. Barry R. Chiswick interconnects Ethnic group and First language in the investigation of issues within Linguistic distance. His studies in Ethnic group integrate themes in fields like Marriage market, Binomial regression and Assortative mating.
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The Effect of Americanization on the Earnings of Foreign-born Men
Barry R. Chiswick.
Journal of Political Economy (1978)
Are Immigrants Favorably Self-Selected?
Barry R. Chiswick.
The American Economic Review (1999)
The Endogeneity between Language and Earnings: International Analyses
Barry R. Chiswick;Paul W. Miller.
Journal of Labor Economics (1995)
Speaking, Reading and Earnings among Low-Skilled Immigrants.
Barry R. Chiswick.
Journal of Labor Economics (1991)
Immigrant earnings: Language skills, linguistic concentrations and the business cycle
Barry R. Chiswick;Paul W. Miller.
Journal of Population Economics (2002)
The international transferability of immigrants’ human capital
Barry R. Chiswick;Paul W. Miller.
Economics of Education Review (2009)
A longitudinal analysis of immigrant occupational mobility: A test of the immigrant assimilation hypothesis
Barry R. Chiswick;Yew Liang Lee;Paul W. Miller.
International Migration Review (2005)
Linguistic Distance: A Quantitative Measure of the Distance Between English and Other Languages
Barry R. Chiswick;Paul W. Miller.
Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development (2005)
Educational attainment: analysis by immigrant generation
Barry R. Chiswick;Noyna DebBurman.
Economics of Education Review (2004)
A model of destination-language acquisition: application to male immigrants in Canada.
Barry R. Chiswick;Paul W. Miller.
Demography (2001)
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