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Browsing publications by Professor Peter Dolton.

Newcastle AuthorsTitleYearFull text
Professor Richard Boys
Professor Peter Dolton
Neil Walker
Adapting the optimal job search model for active labour market policy2007
Professor Peter Dolton
Career progression: Getting-on, getting-by and going nowhere2005
Professor Peter Dolton
Youth unemployment and labour market transitions in Hungary2005
Professor Peter Dolton
Computer Use and Earnings in Britain2004
Professor Peter Dolton
Gender earnings differentials across individuals over time in British cohort studies2004
Professor Peter Dolton
The Economic Effects of School Quality2004
Professor Peter Dolton
The Rate of Return to Teaching: How does it Compare to Other Graduate Jobs?2004
Professor Peter Dolton
The Relationship between Teacher Turnover and School Performance2004
Professor Peter Dolton
A Review of the Economics Analysis of School Choice2003
Professor Peter Dolton
Public and Private Sector Relative Earnings2003
Professor Peter Dolton
The Determinants and Consequences of Graduate Overeducation2003
Professor Peter Dolton
The economics of school choice2003
Professor Peter Dolton
The effective use of student time: A stochastic frontier production function case study2003
Professor Peter Dolton
Evaluation of economic and social policies2002
Professor Peter Dolton
Is a broader curriculum better?2002
Professor Peter Dolton
The Long-Run Effects of Unemployment Monitoring and Work-Search Programs: Experimental Evidence form the UK2002
Professor Peter Dolton
The return on post-compulsory school mathematics study2002
Professor Peter Dolton
Professor Tim Barmby
Emeritus Professor Mike Coombes
Dr Simon Raybould
Generalising from the research2001
Professor Peter Dolton
The earnings and employment effects of young people's vocational training in Britain2001
Professor Peter Dolton
The incidence and effects of overeducation in the U.K. graduate labour market2000
Professor Peter Dolton
Anne Makepeace
How unequally has Equal Pay progressed since the 1970s? : A Study of Two British Cohorts1999
Professor Peter Dolton
The turnover of teachers: A competing risks explanation1999