Jennifer Stewart is a Professor at Carleton School of Public Policy and Administration. Her research areas include Health Economics and Labour Economics.
Teaching Concentration: Policy Analysis. Courses taught at the school: Cost-Benefit Analysis, Microeconomics, Research Methods, Health Economics
Jennifer Stewart
Associate Professor
Director, School of Public Policy and Administration
Research Areas: Health Economics, Labour Economics
Teaching Concentration: Policy Analysis
Courses Taught: Cost-Benefit Analysis, Microeconomics, Research Methods, Health Economics
Honours
CAUT Dedicated Service Award, 2015
Dean’s Award for Excellence in Graduate Research (Social Science), 1999
Dooley, Martin, and Jennifer Stewart. “Family Income and Child Outcomes in Canada.” The Canadian journal of economics 37(4): pp. 898-917 (November 2004) Oxford, UK; Malden.
O’Shea, Eamon, Jennifer Stewart, Cam Donaldson, and Phil Shackley “Eliciting Preferences for Resources Allocation in Health Care,” Economic and Social Review, 32(3): pp.217-238 (2002). SAGE Publications.URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2262/61833
Women’s Empowerment, Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining
Together with Canada’s Carleton University and Uganda’s Development Research and Social Policy Analysis Centre, IMPACT is exploring women’s livelihoods in the artisanal mining of 3Ts (tin, tantalum, tungsten) and gold within the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and Uganda. Our collective goal is to improve opportunities for women in the mining sector.