Siwan Anderson | |
Birth Name: | Kristin Siwan Anderson |
Nationality: | Canadian |
Occupation: | Professor |
Alma Mater: | University of British Columbia |
Siwan Anderson is a Canadian economist and professor at the Vancouver School of Economics (VSE) at the University of British Columbia (UBC).[1] Her area of focus is on development economics with a micro-level approach focusing on institutions in developing countries, and also gender economics focusing on the role of women in the economy.[2] Siwan Anderson is also an Associate of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR), an Associate of the Theoretical Research in Development Economics (ThReD), a Fellow of the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD), and a Faculty Associate of the Center for Effective Global Action (CEGA).[3] [4] Siwan Anderson is the first woman to receive the John Rae Prize from the Canadian Economics Association.[5]
Siwan Anderson was born and raised in Canada. She first earned a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from the University of British Columbia in 1990, finished her master's degree two year later and completed her doctoral degree in 1999. Anderson studied mathematics during her undergraduate years, but seeking to apply these skills to social issues in a more relevant way, she was drawn to economics.[6] When she entered graduate school, Anderson was interested in the issue of poverty, the reasons behind it and the challenges it creates for people. She eventually decided to become an economic researcher, addressing problems within the social sciences using economic tools and analysis.
Siwan Anderson's economic research mainly focuses on the role of micro-level institutions in developing countries such as India, and the role of gender within social science. Most of Anderson's analyses in developing countries tackle the issues between economic development and the function of institutions and female participation. One of her projects aims the reveal "the solution to the missing women puzzle in India." Anderson explains that she wants to "look beyond the explanation of an elevated rate of female infanticides to see what role widowhood might also play" in the economy. She also works on projects in India that examines the rural political institutions. Anderson and her colleagues Ashok Kotwal and Patrick François "have collected data from interviews with 9,000 households on the subject of the new unique identification system that is being implemented across the country." Indeed, Siwan Anderson's researches reveal that women in development economy play a crucial role in constructing the conformation of institutions within society, and also enhancing female endorsement in economic growth positively.
Together with her colleague Chris Bidner, Siwan Anderson examines women's property rights after marriage in developing countries. With a focus on dowry, the study reveals the incentives of allocating property rights between the married couples, as well as the shifting bargaining power within the marriage market. They utilize economic tools and models to clarify and formalize the "dual role" of dowry in the marriage: the dowry represents both a premortem bequest and a market clearing price to compete in the marriage market. The study explains that women's property rights over the dowry depreciate along with the development, and also suggests that since increased direct economic returns for women enhances the welfare of women, it is essential to promote the financial returns to determine women's welfare and legal rights.[9]
This paper studies the significance of female property rights on male and female suicide rates in India. Siwan Anderson and her co-researcher Garance Genicot utilize state-level variation in legal changes to women's property rights to examine this issue.
They discover that enhanced property rights for women are in correlation with a decrease in the difference of suicide rates between female and male, but an increase in suicides in both gender. The vast majority of people who committed suicide are in a married relationship. The paper also provides suggestive evidence that marital discord can be a potential reason for explaining that improving female property rights raises suicide rates. However, this paper is not suggesting that enhancing women's ownership over their properties is an undesirable channel.
With theoretical models and empirical analyses, the study shows how establishing the inheritance rights of women can raise conflict within households and has a correlation in the increase of suicide rates of both genders, highlighting the importance of gender equality and providing help for women seeking to leave unhappy marriages.[10]
In this article, Anderson and her colleague Debraj Ray examine the concept of "Missing Women," which was first proposed by Indian economist Amartya Sen. Some estimates suggest that the number of women who could potentially be alive is over 25 million. In other words, there are more than two million women "missing" in India in a given year. Anderson and Ray analyze the phenomenon by dividing up the age group across the regions in India, and the findings are shocking.
Foremost, the majority of missing women in India die in their adulthood. The research estimates that roughly 12% of missing women die at birth, 25% in childhood, and 43% in adulthood. Additionally, the distribution of missing women by age group varies across different states in India. The southern states have the lowest number of missing women and make up only 10% of the national total. The remaining part of the data distributes throughout the rest of the country. Since the distribution of missing women varies between states and regions, it is difficult to explain such a phenomenon in India theoretically.
Consequently, the research reveals that the severity of the life-threatening dilemma adult women face in India is no less than young girls.[11]
2018-2019 | EDI Research Grant | Department for International Development | |
2018-2019 | Monash University Internal Research Grant | Monash University | |
2018-2019 | CERC Internal Research Grant | Canada Excellence Research Chairs | |
2017-2019 | EDI Research Grant | Department for International Development | |
2015-2017 | IDRC Research Grant | International Development Research Centre | |
2015-2019 | SSHRC Insight Grant | The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada | |
2014-2016 | Hampton Research Grant | University of British Columbia | |
2014-2015 | IGC Research Grant | International Growth Centre | |
2012-2013 | IGC Research Grant | International Growth Centre | |
2012-2016 | IDRC Research Grant | International Development Research Centre | |
2011-2012 | IGC Research Grant | International Growth Centre | |
2011-2012 | UNSW Internal Grant | University of New South Wales | |
2010 | Weatherall Visiting Fellowship | Queen's University | |
2009-2012 | SSHRC Research Grant | The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada | |
2007-2010 | SSHRC Research Grant | The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada | |
2007 | UBC Killam Research Prize | University of British Columbia | |
2006-2009 | SSHRC Research Grant | The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada | |
2004-2006 | HSS Hampton Large Grant | University of British Columbia | |
2003-2006 | SSHRC Research Grant | The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada | |
2003-2004 | Peter Wall Early Career Scholar | The Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies at the University of British Columbia | |
2002-2003 | HSS Hampton Small Grant | University of British Columbia |
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