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Economics and Finance

D-Index
39
Citations
16731
World Ranking
2344
National Ranking
1329

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2020 - Distinguished Fellow of the American Economic Association

Overview

Shelly J. Lundberg is affiliated with the University of California, Santa Barbara in the United States. Their research primarily falls within the Social Sciences, with substantial contributions to subfields including Safety Research, Gender Studies, Demography, Education, and Sociology and Political Science.

Their work addresses a range of topics with a focus on gender, labor, and family dynamics, as well as experimental behavioral economics studies. Additional main topics include culture, economy, and development studies, school choice and performance, poverty, education, and child welfare, intergenerational and educational inequality studies, and family dynamics and relationships.

Recent published papers by Shelly J. Lundberg include:

  • Educational gender gaps (2020), Southern Economic Journal
  • Gender Economics: Dead-Ends and New Opportunities (2022), SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Gender Economics and the Meaning of Discrimination (2022), AEA Papers and Proceedings

Other notable recent works associated with Shelly J. Lundberg's research network include:

  • Vulnerable Boys: Short-term and Long-term Gender Differences in the Impacts of Adolescent Disadvantage (2020), Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
  • Can Positive Feedback Encourage Female and Minority Undergraduates into Economics? (2021), AEA Papers and Proceedings

Frequent co-authors collaborating with Shelly J. Lundberg include Ziteng Lei, Kelly Bedard, and J. Theodore Dodd. Publications have appeared in various academic venues with multiple contributions to the SSRN Electronic Journal, AEA Papers and Proceedings, Southern Economic Journal, Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, and Scottish Journal of Political Economy.

Among professional recognitions, Shelly J. Lundberg was named a Distinguished Fellow of the American Economic Association in 2020.

Best Publications

  • Separate Spheres Bargaining and the Marriage Market

    Shelly Lundberg;Robert Pollak

  • Separate Spheres Bargaining and the Marriage Market

    Unknown

  • Bargaining and Distribution in Marriage

    Shelly Lundberg;Robert A. Pollak

  • The Added Worker Effect

    Shelly Lundberg

  • Parenthood and the earnings of married men and women.

    Shelly Lundberg;Elaina Rose

  • Noncooperative bargaining models of marriage

    Shelly Lundberg;Robert A. Pollak

  • THE EFFECTS OF SONS AND DAUGHTERS ON MEN' S LABOR SUPPLY AND WAGES

    Shelly Lundberg;Elaina Rose

  • Private Discrimination and Social Intervention in Competitive Labor Markets

    Shelly J. Lundberg;Richard Startz

  • Efficiency in Marriage

    Shelly Lundberg;Robert A. Pollak

  • Family Inequality: Diverging Patterns in Marriage, Cohabitation, and Childbearing.

    Shelly Lundberg;Robert A Pollak;Jenna E Stearns

  • Sons, Daughters, and Parental Behaviour

    Shelly Lundberg

  • Labor supply of husbands and wives: a simultaneous equations approach.

    Shelly Lundberg

  • Women in Economics: Stalled Progress

    Shelly J Lundberg;Jenna Stearns

  • The American Family and Family Economics

    Shelly Lundberg;Robert Pollak

  • Adolescent premarital childbearing: do economic incentives matter?

    Shelly Lundberg;Robert D. Plotnick

  • How Does Adolescent Fertility Affect the Human Capital and Wages of Young Women

    Daniel Klepinger;Shelly Lundberg;Robert Plotnick

  • Adolescent Fertility and the Educational Attainment of Young Women

    Daniel H. Klepinger;Shelly Lundberg;Robert D. Plotnick

  • The retirement-consumption puzzle: a marital bargaining approach

    Shelly Lundberg;Richard Startz;Steven Stillman

  • Hours Restrictions and Labor Supply

    William T. Dickens;Shelly J. Lundberg

  • Do husbands and wives pool their resources? Evidence from the U.K. child benefit.

    Lundberg Sj;Pollak Ra;Wales Tj

  • On the Persistence of Racial Inequality

    Shelly Lundberg;Richard Startz

Frequent Co-Authors

Robert A. Pollak
Robert A. Pollak Washington University in St. Louis
Richard Startz
Richard Startz University of California, Santa Barbara
Nicholas M. Kiefer
Nicholas M. Kiefer Cornell University
Steven Stillman
Steven Stillman Free University of Bozen-Bolzano
Sara McLanahan
Sara McLanahan Princeton University
Marco Francesconi
Marco Francesconi University of Essex

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