Abel Brodeur

Research Fellow

University of Ottawa

Abel Brodeur is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at University of Ottawa and the chair of the Institute for Replication. He received his Ph.D. in Economics at Paris School of Economics and visited the London School of Economics as a participant of the European Doctoral Program in Quantitative Economics.

Brodeur's current research interests center around applied economics and research transparency. He has worked on different topics including development, health and labor economics.

His Ph.D. advisors were Professors Andrew E. Clark (PSE) and Jörn-Steffen Pischke (LSE).

Abel Brodeur joined IZA as a research affiliate in August 2012. He is now a research fellow.

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IZA Publications

IZA Discussion Paper No. 16369
published in: American Economic Review, 2023, 113 (11), 2974-3002
IZA Discussion Paper No. 15586
forthcoming in: Economic Journal, 2024
IZA Discussion Paper No. 15476
Abel Brodeur, Nikolai Cook, Jonathan S. Hartley, Anthony Heyes
forthcoming as 'Do Pre-Registration and Pre-Analysis Plans Reduce p-Hacking and Publication Bias? Evidence from 15,992 Test Statistics and Suggestions for Improvement' in: Journal of Political Economy Microeconomics, 2024
IZA Discussion Paper No. 14894
Michael Stuetzer, Abel Brodeur, Martin Obschonka, David Audretsch, Peter J. Rentfrow, Jeff Potter, Samuel D. Gosling
IZA Discussion Paper No. 14410
Abel Brodeur, Lamis Kattan
published in: Journal of Labor Economics, 2022, 40 (2), 437-471
IZA Discussion Paper No. 14034
Leonardo Baccini, Abel Brodeur, Sean Nossek, Eran Shor
published in: Research and Politics, 2021, 8 (1)
IZA Discussion Paper No. 13862
published in: Journal of Population Economics, 2021, 34 (2), 739-767
IZA Discussion Paper No. 13411
Abel Brodeur, David M. Gray, Anik Islam, Suraiya Jabeen Bhuiyan
published in: Journal of Economic Surveys, 2021, 35(4), 1007-1044
IZA Discussion Paper No. 13332
published as 'Determinants of Family Stress and Domestic Violence: Lessons from the COVID-19 Outbreak' in: Canadian Public Policy, 2021, 47 (3), 439-459
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