Länkstig

Eva Ranehill

Universitetslektor

Institutionen för nationalekonomi med
statistik
Besöksadress
Vasagatan 1
41124 Göteborg
Postadress
Box 640
40530 Göteborg

Om Eva Ranehill

I am a behavioral economist whose research employs laboratory and field experiments and empirical studies with archival register data. A large part of my research has focused on behavioral gender gaps—specifically on the robustness of behavioral differences between men and women, what causes such differences, and their economic implications. My current research focuses more on the drivers of gender gaps in the labor market. In this work I study, for example, gender discrimination in the academic hiring process, whether, and if so how, male majority environments discourage female entry and female leadership, and whether women may be less effective leaders because they receive less support from followers. I also work on topics in health and environmental economics.

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Forskningsområden

  • Primary: Behavioral and Experimental Economics.
  • Secondary: Health Economics, Applied Microeconomics

Undervisningsområden

  • Behavioral Economics, Experimental Economics

Utvalda publikationer

Gender and willingness to lead – does the gender composition of teams matter? (Forthcoming in the Review of Economics and Statistics) Born, Andreas, Ranehill, Eva, Sandberg, Anna

Hormonal Contraceptives Do Not Impact Economic Preferences, Ranehill, Eva, Zethraeus, Niklas, Blomberg, E, von Schoulz, B, Lind én Hirschberg, A, Johannesson, M, Dreber, A, Ranehill, E, Zethraeus, N, Blomberg, L, von Schoultz, B, Hirschberg, AL Management science, 64:10, s. 4471-4965, 2018

Assessing the robustness of power posing: No effect on hormones and risk tolerance in a large sample of men and women, Ranehill, Eva, Anna Dreber, Magnus Johannesson, Susanne Leiberg, Sunhae Sul, Roberto Weber, Psychological Science, 2015

Gender and competition in adolescence: Task matters, Anna Dreber, Emma von Essen, Ranehill, Eva, Experimental Economics, 2014

Outrunning the gender gap: boys and girls compete equally, Anna Dreber, Emma von Essen, Ranehill, Eva Experimental Economics, 2010