Huiqiong Duan Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
unknown
Research Areas
Links
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Huiqiong Duan's research examines the impacts of social and economic factors on various populations. Her work includes an analysis of education's causal effect on labor market outcomes in Jordan, published in 2023. She has also investigated gender imbalance and temporary migration patterns in rural China, with findings published in 2024. Duan has explored the lasting impacts of China's anti-poverty program using synthetic control analysis, also published in 2024. Additional research areas include the effects of economic development incentives on population movement, with a publication in 2023, and a county-level migration study from 2021. Duan has co-authored three publications with collaborator Weici Yuan from the University of Central Arkansas. Her scholarly work has resulted in an h-index of 3, with 8 total publications and 27 citations.
Metrics
- h-index: 3
- Publications: 8
- Citations: 28
Selected Publications
-
Gender imbalance and temporary migration: Evidence from rural China (2024)
-
Are there lasting impacts of China’s anti-poverty program? A synthetic control analysis (2024)
-
Do big shifts in economic development incentives attract people? (2023)
-
Education as opportunity? The causal effect of education on labor market outcomes in Jordan (2023)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Gender imbalance and temporary migration: Evidence from rural China
- Do big shifts in economic development incentives attract people?
- county level migration study
- Education as opportunity? The causal effect of education on labor market outcomes in Jordan
- Do big shifts in economic development incentives attract people?
- Do big shifts in economic development incentives attract people?
- county level migration study
- Gender imbalance and temporary migration: Evidence from rural China
Similar Researchers
Based on overlapping research topics