doc_id
stringlengths 32
32
| file_name
stringlengths 36
121
| url
stringlengths 79
271
| num_pages
int64 6
124
| file_size_mb
int64 0
6
| metadata
stringlengths 1.01k
2.78k
| created_at
stringdate 2025-11-28 16:43:49
2025-11-28 16:43:49
| pdf_bytes
pdf | original_md
stringclasses 1
value | hierarchical_md
stringclasses 1
value | sections_toc
stringclasses 1
value | inference_info
stringclasses 1
value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
c3e95bc43231ace088a3266b288edc6c
|
microfinance_for_sanitation_in_India_May_2013_c3e95bc4.pdf
|
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/57a08a40ed915d3cfd00067a/microfinance_for_sanitation_in_India_May_2013.pdf
| 76
| 2
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 107864372, "Title": "Evaluating the potential of microfinance for sanitation in India", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Tr\u00e9molet (2013)", "DateCreated": "17/01/2025", "CreatedBy": "Sharon Ezeagu", "DateEdited": "17/01/2025", "EditedBy": "Sharon Ezeagu", "Year": " ", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/57a08a40ed915d3cfd00067a/microfinance_for_sanitation_in_India_May_2013.pdf", "OldItemId": "211246", "Abstract": "This case study investigates how household financing for sanitation can be mobilised via microfinance institutions and commercial banks in order to accelerate sustainable access to sanitation facilities and/or services. The research (conducted in India between May and June 2011) sought to document existing experiences in providing microfinance services to households to allow them to invest in sanitation solutions that meet their needs. The objective of the research was to map out the existing provision of microfinance for sanitation, identify where opportunities for future market development lie and identify how the development of such a market could be fostered (through the targeted use of public funds or regulatory changes for example).", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Tr\u00e9molet ; ", "ParentAuthors": "", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Tr\u00e9molet ( ) Evaluating the potential of microfinance for sanitation in India. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.773429
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
f86dffe7d526a4ad736f3357423680cd
|
Welfare%20Regimes%20and%20the%20Political%20Economy%20of%20Learning_in_Developing_Countries_f86dffe7.pdf
|
https://riseprogramme.org/sites/default/files/2023-03/Welfare%20Regimes%20and%20the%20Political%20Economy%20of%20Learning_in_Developing_Countries.pdf
| 32
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 110134916, "Title": "Welfare Regimes and the Political Economy of Learning in Developing Countries", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Andrew (2023)", "DateCreated": "13/03/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "13/03/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2023", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://riseprogramme.org/sites/default/files/2023-03/Welfare%20Regimes%20and%20the%20Political%20Economy%20of%20Learning_in_Developing_Countries.pdf", "OldItemId": "RISE148", "Abstract": "This paper synthesises the findings of the RISE Political Economy of Adoption (PET-A) country studies by interpreting their findings in light of the findings of comparative research on the evolution of \u2018welfare regimes\u2019. This paper suggests that PET-A countries have not, for the most part, developed the sorts of political settlements identified as conducive to change in the welfare regimes literature or indeed others that might be expected to produce similar gains. They are instead dominated by predatory coalitions which seek to use education systems for rent-seeking, ideological, or other non-developmental purposes while technocratic and progressive elements are marginalised. In all cases, they consequently lack coalitions that are capable of driving education development. At the same time, the PET-A studies also provide some evidence to suggest that democratic reform can trigger improvements in education policy and learning outcomes by shifting the balance of power between elements within political settlements. In this respect, the PET-A studies suggest that the key to promoting educational development/learning in the developing world may be to think beyond narrow education-focused interventions to broader programs of democratic rights-oriented reform.In presenting this argument, this paper begins by providing an overview of the welfare regimes literature\u2019s findings with regards to the political dynamics that have facilitated education and learning gains. It then assesses the extent to which the PET-A countries have developed such political settlements or indeed any others that might produce learning gains and reviews the evidence in the PET-A studies as to the effects of democratic reform. The final section of the paper presents the conclusions.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Andrew Rosser ; ", "ParentAuthors": " ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Andrew Rosser (2023) Welfare Regimes and the Political Economy of Learning in Developing Countries. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.774965
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
7a4994f3fd3cda3619befb84c2c741ec
|
WP%205769%20Alfaro-UrenaManeliciVasquez%20TheEffectsOfMultinationalsOnWorkers_0_7a4994f3.pdf
|
https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/WP%205769%20Alfaro-UrenaManeliciVasquez%20TheEffectsOfMultinationalsOnWorkers_0.pdf
| 102
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 109238786, "Title": "The Effects of Multinationals on Workers: Evidence from Costa Rica", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Alonso (2021)", "DateCreated": "13/02/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "13/02/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2021", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/WP%205769%20Alfaro-UrenaManeliciVasquez%20TheEffectsOfMultinationalsOnWorkers_0.pdf", "OldItemId": "PEDL083", "Abstract": "This paper estimates the effects of multinational corporations (MNCs) on workers. To that end, Alfaro-Ure\u00f1a et al. (2021) combine microdata on all formal worker-firm and firm-firm relationships in Costa Rica with an instrumental variable approach that exploits shocks to the size of MNCs in the country. First, using an event-study design, they find an MNC wage premium of nine percent. This premium reflects above market wages rather than compensation for disamenities. Next, the researchers study the effects of MNCs on workers in domestic firms. As MNCs bring jobs that pay a premium, they improve outside options by altering both the level and composition of labour demand. MNCs can also enhance the performance of domestic employers through input-output linkages. Shocks to firm performance may then pass through to wages. The researchers show that the growth rate of annual earnings of a worker experiencing a one standard deviation increase in either her labour market or firm-level exposure to MNCs is one percentage point higher than that of an identical worker with no change in either MNC exposure. Finally, they develop a model to rationalise the reduced-form evidence and estimate structural parameters that govern wage setting in domestic firms. They model MNCs as paying a wage premium and buying inputs from domestic firms. When hiring workers, firms incur recruitment and training costs. The researchers find that workers are sensitive to improvements in outside options. Moreover, they estimate that the marginal recruitment and training cost of the average domestic firm is 90% of the annual earnings of a worker earning the competitive market wage. This high cost allows incumbent workers to extract part of the increase in firm rents coming from intensified linkages with MNCs.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Alonso Alfaro-Ure\u00f1a ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Isabela Manelici ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Alonso Alfaro-Ure\u00f1a (2021) The Effects of Multinationals on Workers: Evidence from Costa Rica. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.781083
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
07f42d4e11a562fe6d4988de64b329de
|
hif-gbv-seed-funding_final-narrative-template-10192016_07f42d4e.pdf
|
https://www.elrha.org/docs/document/hif-gbv-seed-funding_final-narrative-template-10192016.pdf?file_url=document/f9lnu2s59l7ob23j5s1da76s6f/ufklm-ohn3j3u7fkbfjvlqdatf0/original?content-type=application%2fpdf&name=hif-gbv-seed-funding_final-narrative-template-10192016.pdf
| 6
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 112647739, "Title": "Final Report: Mobile technology targeting GBV among Syrian adolescent refugees", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Women (2016)", "DateCreated": "02/05/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "02/05/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2016", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://www.elrha.org/docs/document/hif-gbv-seed-funding_final-narrative-template-10192016.pdf?file_url=document/f9lnu2s59l7ob23j5s1da76s6f/ufklm-ohn3j3u7fkbfjvlqdatf0/original?content-type=application%2fpdf&name=hif-gbv-seed-funding_final-narrative-template-10192016.pdf", "OldItemId": "ELHRA153", "Abstract": "This project aimed to transform the way humanitarian logistics are done by disrupting and improving supply chains through the use of technology, especially 3D printers (3DP), engaging and training local people in this approach. 3DP provides one way to disrupt the current challenges of providing relief programmes with the right supplies and may also help overcome barriers to importation that governments sometimes impose. International humanitarian response has yet to take full advantage of the opportunities afforded by such recent technological advances.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Women and Health Alliance International; ", "ParentAuthors": " ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Women and Health Alliance International (2016) Final Report: Mobile technology targeting GBV among Syrian adolescent refugees. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.782136
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
920dce4db7d7de9d08893911daca2d65
|
Liberia%20Endline%20Report_0_920dce4d.pdf
|
https://www.gafspfund.org/sites/default/files/inline-files/Liberia%20Endline%20Report_0.pdf
| 60
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 111654886, "Title": "Impact Evaluation of Smallholders Agriculture Productivity Enhancement and Commercialization (SAPEC)", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Development (2019)", "DateCreated": "16/04/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "16/04/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2019", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://www.gafspfund.org/sites/default/files/inline-files/Liberia%20Endline%20Report_0.pdf", "OldItemId": "i2i033", "Abstract": "", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Development Impact Evaluation (DIME; ", "ParentAuthors": "Smallholders Agriculture Productivity Enhancement and Commercialization (SA; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Development Impact Evaluation (DIME (2019) Impact Evaluation of Smallholders Agriculture Productivity Enhancement and Commercialization (SAPEC). : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.785247
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
c10c6c5a01eaaee2a4be96fecdd819dc
|
Richard_Review%20Disability%20and%20Older%20in%20Humanitarian%20WASH_2019_c10c6c5a.pdf
|
https://www.washcluster.net/sites/gwc.com/files/2022-01/Richard_Review%20Disability%20and%20Older%20in%20Humanitarian%20WASH_2019.pdf
| 44
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 112647854, "Title": "Rapid review of disability and older age inclusion in WASH", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "DANIELLE (2019)", "DateCreated": "02/05/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "02/05/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2019", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://www.washcluster.net/sites/gwc.com/files/2022-01/Richard_Review%20Disability%20and%20Older%20in%20Humanitarian%20WASH_2019.pdf", "OldItemId": "ELHRA268", "Abstract": "We identified a knowledge gap in good practices and innovation for how people with disabilities and older people are included in water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions in humanitarian contexts.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "DANIELLE RICHARD ; ", "ParentAuthors": "SHIRIN KIANI ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "DANIELLE RICHARD (2019) Rapid review of disability and older age inclusion in WASH. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.786535
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
f3d95e295958e8f681966f9d672029c0
|
Summary-of-Evaluator-Findings-and-Lessons-from-AgResults-Prize-Competitions-2013-2020_f3d95e29.pdf
|
https://agresults.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Summary-of-Evaluator-Findings-and-Lessons-from-AgResults-Prize-Competitions-2013-2020.pdf
| 33
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 107868207, "Title": "Summary of Evaluator Findings and Lessons from AgResults Prize Competitions: 2013 to 2020", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Mainville (2021)", "DateCreated": "19/01/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "19/01/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2021", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://agresults.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Summary-of-Evaluator-Findings-and-Lessons-from-AgResults-Prize-Competitions-2013-2020.pdf", "OldItemId": "AGR014", "Abstract": "", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Mainville Denise ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Sally Cameron ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Mainville Denise (2021) Summary of Evaluator Findings and Lessons from AgResults Prize Competitions: 2013 to 2020. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.787981
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
7f1687e33a25da6584d29770a4a9a92a
|
Jordan-Midline-EE-Report-2024-web-_7f1687e3.pdf
|
https://www.gage.odi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Jordan-Midline-EE-Report-2024-web-.pdf
| 40
| 3
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 110529730, "Title": "\u2018I don\u2019t see my future in Jordan\u2019: GAGE evidence on young people\u2019s economic empowerment in Jordan", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Elizabeth (2024)", "DateCreated": "26/03/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "26/03/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2024", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://www.gage.odi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Jordan-Midline-EE-Report-2024-web-.pdf", "OldItemId": "GAGE107", "Abstract": "Although the World Bank (2024a) notes that Jordan\u2019s economy has shown \u2018remarkable resilience in maintaining stability and growth in the face of regional and global crises\u2019, the country remains off-track to deliver on Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 8 (decent work and economic growth) and SDG 5 (gender equality). This is because economic growth remains stubbornly low, unemployment (especially youth unemployment) remains stubbornly high, and women\u2019s access to the labour market remains marginal compared to men\u2019s (Sachs et al., 2023; see also World Bank, 2024b). This report aims to contribute to policy debates about how to lift the economic trajectories of young people living in Jordan. It draws on mixed-methods data collected in 2022 and 2023 by the Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence (GAGE) research programme. Designed to build on baseline findings from research conducted in 2018 and 2019, surveys were undertaken with nearly 3,000 Syrian, Jordanian and Palestinian adolescents and young adults living in Jordan.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Elizabeth Presler-Marshall ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Nicola Jones ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Elizabeth Presler-Marshall (2024) \u2018I don\u2019t see my future in Jordan\u2019: GAGE evidence on young people\u2019s economic empowerment in Jordan. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.790551
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
b4b34750da5ee700a0daf01bebcbc20f
|
Short-Run-Welfare-Impacts-of-Factory-Jobs-Experimental-Evidence-from-Ethiopia_b4b34750.pdf
|
https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/400881595340716051/pdf/Short-Run-Welfare-Impacts-of-Factory-Jobs-Experimental-Evidence-from-Ethiopia.pdf
| 39
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 109416472, "Title": "Short-Run Welfare Impacts of Factory Jobs : Experimental Evidence from Ethiopia", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Tefera (2020)", "DateCreated": "18/02/2025", "CreatedBy": "Sharon Ezeagu", "DateEdited": "18/02/2025", "EditedBy": "Sharon Ezeagu", "Year": "2020", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/400881595340716051/pdf/Short-Run-Welfare-Impacts-of-Factory-Jobs-Experimental-Evidence-from-Ethiopia.pdf", "OldItemId": "100606", "Abstract": "Many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa face a rapidly growing population and labor force in demand of good jobs. Ethiopia has reacted to this challenge by prioritizing large-scale industrial development through the construction of industrial parks to drive exports, job creation, and growth. However, the African experience with industrial parks so far has been mixed. To provide further evidence on the welfare effects of factory jobs in Ethiopia, this study conducted an experiment that facilitated the job application and onboarding process for young female job seekers at three factories. Using panel data from 827 applicants, the study finds that the extra support increased the likelihood of being employed in the treatment group in the short run, largely driven by wage and factory work. Further, the intervention raised reported monthly income by nearly 30 percent in the treatment group. However, the study also finds an adverse impact on health outcomes as well as downward adjustments of applicants\u2019 expectations and perceptions of the earnings potential and desirability of factory work in response to the treatment. This work is part of the Closing the Gender Gap in Africa: evaluating new policies and programmes for women\u2019s economic empowerment programme", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Tefera G A; ", "ParentAuthors": "Buehren N ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Tefera G A (2020) Short-Run Welfare Impacts of Factory Jobs : Experimental Evidence from Ethiopia. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.793084
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
7501f6171f52c2ec4950abf8843e8207
|
JA%202428%20HardyMcCasland%20AreSmallFirmsLaborConstrained_0_7501f617.pdf
|
https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/JA%202428%20HardyMcCasland%20AreSmallFirmsLaborConstrained_0.pdf
| 43
| 0
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 109238888, "Title": "Are Small Firms Labor Constrained? Experimental Evidence from Ghana", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Morgan (2023)", "DateCreated": "13/02/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "13/02/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2023", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/JA%202428%20HardyMcCasland%20AreSmallFirmsLaborConstrained_0.pdf", "OldItemId": "PEDL185", "Abstract": "We report the results of a field experiment that randomly placed unemployed young people as apprentices with small firms in Ghana, and included no cash subsidy to firms (or workers) beyond in-kind recruitment services. Treated firms experienced increases in firm size of approximately half a worker and firm profits of approximately 10% for each apprentice placement offered, documenting frictions to novice hiring. We interpret the program as providing a novel worker screening technology to firms, as (voluntary) worker participation included non-monetary application costs, echoing the widespread use of an entrance fee mechanism for hiring apprentices in the existing labor market.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Morgan Hardy ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Jamie McCasland ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Morgan Hardy (2023) Are Small Firms Labor Constrained? Experimental Evidence from Ghana. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.796767
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
f0951ebe4641d9af6af5bc60d805db3f
|
P132759-AAA-Final-output_f0951ebe.pdf
|
https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/264971490208356065/pdf/P132759-AAA-Final-output.pdf
| 55
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 108025050, "Title": "Building the Human Capital of Tomorrow - An Impact Evaluation of the Early Childhood Stimulation Program", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Nomura (2017)", "DateCreated": "22/01/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "22/01/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2017", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/264971490208356065/pdf/P132759-AAA-Final-output.pdf", "OldItemId": "SIEF080", "Abstract": "", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Nomura Shinsaku ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Matsuda Norihiko ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Nomura Shinsaku (2017) Building the Human Capital of Tomorrow - An Impact Evaluation of the Early Childhood Stimulation Program. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.798147
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
8cffb7e0029e292be43e61d64a33b27e
|
WP%208956%20HuppertzMajuneOlapade%20AfricanContinentalIntegrationFirmAwarenessTradePolicy_8cffb7e0.pdf
|
https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/WP%208956%20HuppertzMajuneOlapade%20AfricanContinentalIntegrationFirmAwarenessTradePolicy.pdf
| 27
| 3
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 109238748, "Title": "African Continental Integration and Firm Awareness of Trade Policy: Evidence from a Kenyan Pilot Study", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Maximilian (2022)", "DateCreated": "13/02/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "13/02/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2022", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/WP%208956%20HuppertzMajuneOlapade%20AfricanContinentalIntegrationFirmAwarenessTradePolicy.pdf", "OldItemId": "PEDL045", "Abstract": "This project assesses the importance of an as-yet underappreciated potential barrier to international trade and firm growth: firms being uninformed about trade costs and unaware of trade agreements relevant to their sector. We focus on the recently signed African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). We present evidence from a pilot study establishing that around half of Kenyan firms are unaware of AfCFTA. We find substantial levels of unawareness even among larger and internationally active firms. This pilot was done in preparation for a larger-scale project combining customs data with a randomized intervention to assess the importance of these information frictions. In addition to showing a substantial lack of information about AfCFTA, we present firms\u2019 assessments of the threats and opportunities of AfCFTA and find that firms are generally optimistic about it. We also present data on the impact of COVID on business performance; more than 82% of Kenyan firms indicated their income declined as a result of the pandemic.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Maximilian Huppertz ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Socrates Majune ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Maximilian Huppertz (2022) African Continental Integration and Firm Awareness of Trade Policy: Evidence from a Kenyan Pilot Study. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.803022
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
c095b4147fd7f45c6356db8424366fae
|
Building-social-cohesion-in-conflict-affected-communities_c095b414.pdf
|
https://www.gage.odi.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Building-social-cohesion-in-conflict-affected-communities.pdf
| 32
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 110529794, "Title": "Building social cohesion in conflict affected communities: a retrospective research study with refugee and host community adolescents in Lebanon", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Ingrid (2018)", "DateCreated": "26/03/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "26/03/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2018", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://www.gage.odi.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Building-social-cohesion-in-conflict-affected-communities.pdf", "OldItemId": "GAGE171", "Abstract": "This briefing presents the findings of a qualitative research study on the current and retrospective effects of two peacebuilding projects implemented by Search for Common Ground with adolescents from refugee and host communities in Lebanon. It explores the positive and negative gendered effects of peacebuilding project initiatives implemented by Search for Common Ground on Lebanese adolescents\u2019 development trajectories in the short and medium term. The briefing gives recommendations to organisations aiming to replicate the model of these peacebuilding projects. The findings also point to a number of programming implications, many of which resonate with the recommendations of the young people involved in the evaluation.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Ingrid Gercama ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Nicola Jones ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Ingrid Gercama (2018) Building social cohesion in conflict affected communities: a retrospective research study with refugee and host community adolescents in Lebanon. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.804335
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
4df5efc4b6ede6d027b15c138240f2af
|
Why_Students_Aren%E2%80%99t_Learning_What_They_Need_for_a_Productive_Life_4df5efc4.pdf
|
https://riseprogramme.org/sites/default/files/2023-03/Why_Students_Aren%E2%80%99t_Learning_What_They_Need_for_a_Productive_Life.pdf
| 36
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 110134911, "Title": "Why Students Aren\u2019t Learning What They Need for a Productive Life", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Bruce (2023)", "DateCreated": "13/03/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "13/03/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2023", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://riseprogramme.org/sites/default/files/2023-03/Why_Students_Aren%E2%80%99t_Learning_What_They_Need_for_a_Productive_Life.pdf", "OldItemId": "RISE143", "Abstract": "The RISE program is a seven-year research effort that seeks to understand what features make education systems coherent and effective in their context and how the complex dynamics within a system allow policies to be successful. RISE had research teams in seven countries: Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Tanzania, and Vietnam. It also commissioned research by education specialists in Chile, Egypt, Kenya, Peru, and South Africa. Those researchers tested ideas about how the determinants of learning lie more in the realm of politics and particularly in the interests of elites. They focused on how the political conditions have (or have not) put learning at the center of education systems (mostly not) while understanding the challenges of doing so. Each country team produced a detailed study pursuing answers to two central research questions: Did the country prioritize learning over access, and if so, during what periods? What role did politics play in the key decisions and how? The full studies detail their analytical frameworks, their data, and sources (generally interviews, government internal documents and reports, and other local and international publications), and the power of their assessments, given their caveats and limitations. Country summaries extract from the full studies how leadership, governance, teaching, and societal engagement are pertinent to student outcomes. This synthesis, in line with Levy 2022, draws on the country summaries to detail the salience of goals of national leaders, alliances of stakeholders, missions of education bureaucracies, and expectations of society", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Bruce Ross-Larson ; ", "ParentAuthors": " ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Bruce Ross-Larson (2023) Why Students Aren\u2019t Learning What They Need for a Productive Life. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.806073
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
1c3748d03d50dda1a1481f098d267b6e
|
RISE_WP-061_DeJaeghere_etal_1c3748d0.pdf
|
https://riseprogramme.org/sites/default/files/2021-02/RISE_WP-061_DeJaeghere_etal.pdf
| 34
| 0
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 110134851, "Title": "Inequalities in Learning in Vietnam: Teachers\u2019 Beliefs About and Classroom Practices for Ethnic Minorities", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Joan (2021)", "DateCreated": "13/03/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "13/03/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2021", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://riseprogramme.org/sites/default/files/2021-02/RISE_WP-061_DeJaeghere_etal.pdf", "OldItemId": "RISE083", "Abstract": "Global and national education agendas are concerned with improving quality and equality of learning outcomes. This paper provides an analysis of the case of Vietnam, which is regarded as having high learning outcomes and less inequality in learning. But national data and international test outcomes may mask the hidden inequalities that exist between minoritized groups and majority (Kinh) students. Drawing on data from qualitative videos and interviews of secondary teachers across 10 provinces, we examine the role of teachers\u2019 beliefs, curricular design and actions in the classroom (Gale et al., 2017). We show that teachers hold different beliefs and engage in curricular design \u2013 or the use of hegemonic curriculum and instructional practices that produce different learning outcomes for minoritized students compared to Kinh students. It suggests that policies need to focus on the social-cultural aspects of teaching in addition to the material and technical aspects.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Joan DeJaeghere ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Vu Dao ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Joan DeJaeghere (2021) Inequalities in Learning in Vietnam: Teachers\u2019 Beliefs About and Classroom Practices for Ethnic Minorities. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.808073
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
9999b42ca3057ef33018ebaf04dd32fb
|
Child-Protection-Systematic-Review_9999b42c.pdf
|
https://fic.tufts.edu/wp-content/uploads/Child-Protection-Systematic-Review.pdf
| 124
| 2
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 111783024, "Title": "The Impact of Protection Interventions on Unaccompanied and Separated Children in Humanitarian Crises", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Impact of Protection Interventions on UASC", "DateCreated": "22/04/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "20/05/2025", "EditedBy": "SUNNY KABBINADA", "Year": "2017", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://fic.tufts.edu/wp-content/uploads/Child-Protection-Systematic-Review.pdf", "OldItemId": "HEP004", "Abstract": "This independent systematic review, commissioned by the Humanitarian Evidence Programme\u2014a partnership between Oxfam GB and the Feinstein International Center at Tufts University\u2014synthesizes and evaluates evidence on the impact of protection interventions for unaccompanied and separated children (UASC) during humanitarian crises in low- and middle-income countries since 1983. The review focuses on interventions implemented during the period of separation, such as family tracing and reunification (FTR), interim care (including foster and residential care), and mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS). Of 5,535 records screened, 23 studies met the inclusion criteria, with most evidence coming from African conflict settings. The review finds that while some interventions (notably FTR and interim care) can restore protective environments and promote safety, the overall evidence base is modest, with many studies assessed as low to medium quality and a high risk of bias. The authors call for improved evaluation methods, more geographical diversity in research, and greater focus on contexts beyond conflict, such as natural disasters.\n\n", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Journal, Article", "Authors": "Katharine Williamson ; Priya Gupta ; Leigh-Anne Gillespie ; Harry Shannon ; Debbie Landis ; ", "ParentAuthors": "; ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Katharine Williamson, Priya Gupta, Leigh-Anne Gillespie, Harry Shannon, and Debbie Landis (2017) The Impact of Protection Interventions on Unaccompanied and Separated Children in Humanitarian Crises. , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.811599
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
5bff672c83b4a03b633a8b03252ecbbe
|
failure_to_scale_report_5bff672c.pdf
|
https://www.elrha.org/docs/document/failure_to_scale_report.pdf?file_url=document/buqq1v45k17uf2r0f03prabp4u/v22kqxgucb8wpicolqbwd-9-rhs/original?content-type=application%2fpdf&name=failure_to_scale_report.pdf
| 71
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 112647588, "Title": "Scaling humanitarian innovation: challenges\u201a insights\u201a and the path forward", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Neil (2024)", "DateCreated": "02/05/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "02/05/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2024", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://www.elrha.org/docs/document/failure_to_scale_report.pdf?file_url=document/buqq1v45k17uf2r0f03prabp4u/v22kqxgucb8wpicolqbwd-9-rhs/original?content-type=application%2fpdf&name=failure_to_scale_report.pdf", "OldItemId": "ELHRA2", "Abstract": "In a recent study for the Humanitarian Innovation Fund, we explored the challenges humanitarian innovations face in achieving scale. Our research highlights why this issue matters, its implications, and its underlying causes. Central to our study were in-depth interviews with 23 practitioners - including innovators, innovation supporters, experts, and representatives from organisations adopting innovation \u2013 along with workshops and extensive desktop research. When we asked people what \u201cscale\u201d means, it was clear that humanitarian scale is not as simple a concept as it might be in other settings. Importantly, scale was understood as relative to the size of the problem the innovation aspires to address. Asking \u2018how accessible is the solution to most people who experience the problem?\u2019 is one way of viewing scale. A humanitarian solution that systematically excludes specific groups, the most vulnerable or the hardest to reach, doesn\u2019t seem to qualify as having scaled. Therefore, interpreting what is or isn\u2019t scale needs a nuanced and contextually based understanding. Some practitioners took a more strategic view of scale and perceived an innovation that has scaled or that has scaling potential as being one that can cross boundaries \u2013 moving beyond one organisation or region or country. This perspective sees scale not as an achievement but as a property - one which describes the ease with which new users can or will choose to adopt it (or even adapt it) \u2013 and suggests that scalability should be built into the design and testing of innovations from the onset if they\u2019re to have a broader impact.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Neil Townsend ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Aradhana Gurung ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Neil Townsend (2024) Scaling humanitarian innovation: challenges\u201a insights\u201a and the path forward. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.818772
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
c1042a6fe95d2cd807e45a0731dc97a0
|
Goldstein_Short-term%20Impacts%20of%20Formalization%20Assistance%20and%20a%20Bank%20Informatiojn%20Session_0_c1042a6f.pdf
|
https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/Goldstein_Short-term%20Impacts%20of%20Formalization%20Assistance%20and%20a%20Bank%20Informatiojn%20Session_0.pdf
| 44
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 109238858, "Title": "Short-Term Impacts of Formalization Assistance and a Bank Information Session on Business Registration and Access to Finance in Malawi", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Francisco (2015)", "DateCreated": "13/02/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "13/02/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2015", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/Goldstein_Short-term%20Impacts%20of%20Formalization%20Assistance%20and%20a%20Bank%20Informatiojn%20Session_0.pdf", "OldItemId": "PEDL155", "Abstract": "Despite regulatory efforts designed to make it easier for firms to formalize, informality remains extremely high among firms in Sub-Saharan Africa. In most of the region, business registration in a national registry is separate from tax registration. This paper by Campos, Goldstein and Mckenzie (2015) provides initial results from an experiment in Malawi that randomly allocated firms into a control group and three treatment groups: a)a group offered assistance for costless business registration; b) a group offered assistance with costless business registration and (separate) tax registration; and c) a group offered assistance for costless business registration along with an information session at a bank that ended with the offer of business bank accounts. The study finds that all three treatments had extremely large impacts on business registration, with 75 percent of those offered assistance receiving a business registration certificate. The findings offer a cost-effective way of getting firms to formalize in this dimension. However, in common with other studies, information and assistance has a limited impact on tax registration. The paper measures the short-term impacts of formalization on financial access and usage. Business registration alone has no impact for either men or women on bank account usage, savings, or credit. However, the combination of formalization assistance and the bank information session results in significant impacts on having a business bank account, financial practices, savings, and use of complementary financial products.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Francisco Campos ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Markus Goldstein ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Francisco Campos (2015) Short-Term Impacts of Formalization Assistance and a Bank Information Session on Business Registration and Access to Finance in Malawi. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.819923
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
ecb8a1061e00eeaeff1166c408a1fcf1
|
Resourcing-girls-Report_2024-1-1_ecb8a106.pdf
|
https://www.gage.odi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Resourcing-girls-Report_2024-1-1.pdf
| 42
| 6
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 110529736, "Title": "Resourcing girls: The potential and challenges of girl- and youth-led organising", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Silvia (2024)", "DateCreated": "26/03/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "26/03/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2024", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://www.gage.odi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Resourcing-girls-Report_2024-1-1.pdf", "OldItemId": "GAGE113", "Abstract": "Young people have been hailed as torchbearers of gender equality and as key actors in identifying and implementing solutions our world urgently requires. This said, understanding how girl- and youth-led organisations operate and their positioning within the ecosystem of gender equality and social change efforts requires careful examination. This report explores the experiences of girl-and youth-led work across low-and middle-income country contexts, and aims to understand the characteristics, contributions, and challenges of girl-and youth-led organisations. It highlights the global focus on gender equality and girls\u2019 rights, emphasizing the increasing visibility of these issues in development commitments yet the complexities in translating these into tangible benefits for girls. It draws on a rapid evidence review of secondary literature and key informant interviews with girl-and youth-led organisation members, intermediary organisations involved in funding girl- and youth-led groups and monitoring and evaluation experts to understand the contributions and impact of girl-and youth-led initiatives within the broader ecosystem of adolescent and youth empowerment and development as well to investigate the challenges they face in carrying out and expanding their work. The report concludes with reflections and key recommendations stemming from the research.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Silvia Guglielmi ; ", "ParentAuthors": "Nicola Jones ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Silvia Guglielmi (2024) Resourcing girls: The potential and challenges of girl- and youth-led organising. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.826859
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
||
36e6dc9f3be5313c29d5492055af6a82
|
Caprettini_Taxes%2C%20Misallocations%20and%20Productivity_36e6dc9f.pdf
|
https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/Caprettini_Taxes%2C%20Misallocations%20and%20Productivity.pdf
| 22
| 1
|
{"Outcomes": [], "ItemId": 109238865, "Title": "Taxes, Misallocations, and Productivity", "ParentTitle": "", "ShortTitle": "Bruno (2014)", "DateCreated": "13/02/2025", "CreatedBy": "Varsha Nair", "DateEdited": "13/02/2025", "EditedBy": "Varsha Nair", "Year": "2014", "Month": "", "StandardNumber": "", "City": "", "Country": "", "Publisher": "", "Institution": "", "Volume": "", "Pages": "", "Edition": "", "Issue": "", "Availability": "", "URL": "https://pedl.cepr.org/sites/default/files/Caprettini_Taxes%2C%20Misallocations%20and%20Productivity.pdf", "OldItemId": "PEDL162", "Abstract": "Misallocations of factors of production have the potential to explain a large portion of cross-country differences in productivity (Hsieh and Klenow, 2009). Yet, empirical evidence relating actual differences in firms' productivity to observable policy distortions has been scarce. In this paper, Caprettini (2014) exploits a fiscal reform in Brazil to provide direct empirical evidence of the distortions created by turnover taxes. Turnover taxes are business taxes that, unlike Value Added Taxes, do not allow to deduct the cost of intermediate inputs from the tax base, and that for this reason hit disproportionately industries whose inputs account for a large share of the fiscal value of production. Using a difference-in-difference approach, Caprettini shows that after the reform sectors that rely more on intermediate inputs grow faster in employment, revenue and industrial sales. Firms in the same sectors that were not affected by the reform do not show similar patterns of growth during the period. These results have relevant policy implications, as turnover taxes are very common around the world.", "Comments": "", "TypeName": "Report", "Authors": "Bruno Caprettini ; ", "ParentAuthors": " ; ", "DOI": "", "Keywords": "", "ItemStatus": "I", "ItemStatusTooltip": "Included in review", "QuickCitation": "Bruno Caprettini (2014) Taxes, Misallocations, and Productivity. : , "}
|
2025-11-28T16:43:49.828178
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[DOCLING PROCESSING FAILED]
|
[{"columns_added": ["original_md", "hierarchical_md", "sections_toc"], "processor": "granite-docling + hierarchical-pdf", "processing_date": "2025-12-02T17:37:10.668030", "script": "hf_docling_processing.py", "script_version": "5.0.0"}]
|
PDF Document Processing with Docling
This dataset contains structured markdown extraction from PDFs in baobabtech/test-eval-documents using Docling with hierarchical parsing.
Processing Details
- Source Dataset: baobabtech/test-eval-documents
- Number of PDFs: 20
- Processing Time: 0.1 minutes
- Processing Date: 2025-12-02 17:37 UTC
Configuration
- PDF Column:
pdf_bytes - Dataset Split:
train
Dataset Structure
The dataset contains all original columns plus:
original_md: Markdown extracted by Docling (before hierarchical restructuring)hierarchical_md: Markdown with proper heading hierarchy (after hierarchical processing)sections_toc: Table of contents (one section per line, indented by level)inference_info: JSON with processing metadata
Usage
from datasets import load_dataset
dataset = load_dataset("YOUR_DATASET_ID", split="train")
for example in dataset:
print(f"Document: {example.get('file_name', 'unknown')}")
# Original markdown from Docling
print("=== Original Markdown ===")
print(example['original_md'][:500])
# Hierarchical markdown with proper heading levels
print("\n=== Hierarchical Markdown ===")
print(example['hierarchical_md'][:500])
# Table of contents
print("\n=== Table of Contents ===")
print(example['sections_toc'])
break
- Downloads last month
- 4