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Catia Batista

Global rank #7526 91%

Institution: Universidade Nova de Lisboa

Primary Field: Development (weighted toward more recent publications)

Homepage: http://www.catiabatista.org/

First Publication: 2011

Most Recent: 2025

RePEc ID: pba327 ↗

Publication Scores

Scores use coauthorship adjustment: α/n credit per paper, where n = number of authors. α = 2.01: calibrated so average adjusted count equals average raw count (a zero-sum adjustment).

Period S (4x) A (2x) B (1x) C (½x) Total
Last 5 Years 0.00 2.92 0.67 0.00 6.50
Last 10 Years 0.00 2.92 4.02 0.00 10.36
All Time 0.00 3.59 5.70 0.00 13.87

Publication Statistics

Raw Publications 14
Coauthorship-Adjusted Count 11.34

Publications (14)

Year Article Journal Tier Authors
2025 What matters for the decision to study abroad? A lab-in-the-field experiment in Cape Verde Journal of Development Economics A 5
2025 Is Mobile Money Changing Rural Africa? Evidence from a Field Experiment Review of Economics and Statistics A 2
2023 Can information and alternatives to irregular migration reduce “backway” migration from The Gambia? Journal of Development Economics A 4
2023 Testing classic theories of migration in the lab Journal of International Economics A 2
2022 Diffusion of Rival Information in the Field.” World Bank Economic Review B 3
2020 Improving access to savings through mobile money: Experimental evidence from African smallholder farmers World Development B 2
2019 Do migrant social networks shape political attitudes and behavior at home? World Development B 3
2018 Migrant Remittances and Information Flows: Evidence from a Field Experiment World Bank Economic Review B 2
2017 Return Migration, Self-selection and Entrepreneurship Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics B 3
2016 Do migrants send remittances as a way of self-insurance? Oxford Economic Papers C 2
2015 Directed giving: Evidence from an inter-household transfer experiment Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization B 3
2014 Stages of diversification in a neoclassical world Economics Letters C 2
2012 Testing the ‘brain gain’ hypothesis: Micro evidence from Cape Verde Journal of Development Economics A 3
2011 Do Migrants Improve Governance at Home? Evidence from a Voting Experiment World Bank Economic Review B 2