Gwilym Pryce
gwilympryce.bsky.social
Gwilym Pryce
@gwilympryce.bsky.social

Professor of Economics, University of Sheffield. Interested in geographical inequality, social cohesion, and the impacts of residential segregation (esp. ‘social frontiers’).

Economics 68%
Political science 9%

Reposted by Gwilym Pryce

@justinmadders.bsky.social MP, mentioned the government is working with groups such as @carers-uk.bsky.social and the Centre for Care. We look forward to engaging with developments for unpaid carers.
@circleshef.bsky.social

Reposted by Gwilym Pryce

We often collaborate with our partners, @carers-uk.bsky.social and their counterparts in the other UK nations when producing research on unpaid carers. David Chadwick cites more of our work on the value of unpaid care in Wales @carerswales.bsky.social
@sheffielduni.bsky.social

Reposted by Gwilym Pryce

Yesterday at a Parliamentary debate on Carer’s Leave, @wendychambld.bsky.social shared our research findings, including the Centre for Care’s recent work estimating the value of unpaid care to the UK economy- £162 billion a year.
@sheffielduni.bsky.social @houseofcommons.parliament.uk
Welcome to @maartenvanham.bsky.social ! Urban geog prof at TU Delft. With @gwilympryce.bsky.social we got to work w AMAZING Dutch microdata to analyse movement in Rotterdam. I recently used migration metrics from that & applied to business births/deaths for SYMCA: danolner.github.io/FirmAnalysis...

Findings:

Participants were more likely to recognise our SF estimates as local community borders than a selection of random alternatives.

Data & code here: github.com/life-at-the-fr…
https://github.com/life-at-the-fr…

RCT = a randomised discrete choice experiment to test whether boundary detection algorithms produce social boundaries that are recognisable to local residents.

We then run the double-blind experiment with participants drawn from residents and experts in Rotherham, England.

Our latest paper: a social frontiers RCT

journals.plos.org/plosone/articl…

A growing number of studies estimate "social frontiers" -- abrupt social boundaries between neighbourhoods.

But are these these statistical estimates meangful?

We propse a simple RCT to test this.

The most remarkable graphs I've seen in a long time.

“at *every* point on the income distribution, Americans live shorter lives than the English

So why do Americans live shorther lives than the English?

Check out excellent thread by @jburnmurdoch here:

x.com/jburnmurdoch...

Reposted by Gwilym Pryce

You may think "bookworm" is just a made-up term.

It's not.

Good article by Jenny Phillimore and Olivia Petie on what life is like for the asylum seekers in the hotels being attacked by far right groups, and the way forward for policy makers.

theconversation.com/what-life-is...
What life is like for the asylum seekers in hotels being attacked by far right groups
Doctors have found high levels of gastrointestinal problems and suicidal thoughts among asylum seekers living in hotels and former army barracks.
theconversation.com