Journal articles

‘Multilevel Modelling of Country Effects: A Cautionary Tale’ (2015), with Stephen P Jenkins, forthcoming European Sociological Review, DOI: 10.1093/esr/jcv059. Includes Supplementary Material.

'Access to Flexible Working and Informal Care' (2012), Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 59(4): 361-389.

'Does housework lower wages? Evidence for Britain' (2011), with Almudena Sevilla-Sanz, Oxford Economic Papers, 63(1): 187-210.

'Income, Deprivation and Poverty: a longitudinal analysis' (2011), with Richard Berthoud, Journal of Social Policy, 40(1): 135-156.
Copyright CUP. http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=7835373&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S0047279410000504

'Are there Asymmetries in the Effects of Training on the Conditional Male Wage Distribution?' (2010), with Wiji Arulampalam and Alison Booth, Journal of Population Economics, 23: 251–272.

'Workers, Workplaces and Working Hours' (2007), British Journal of Industrial Relations, 45(4), 735-759.

'Is There a Glass Ceiling over Europe? Exploring the Gender Pay Gap across the Wages Distribution', with Wiji Arulampalam and Alison Booth (2007), Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 60(2), 163-186.

'Free To Choose? Differences in the Hours Determination of Constrained and Unconstrained Workers' (2007), Oxford Economic Papers, 59(2), 226-252.

'Who Pays for General Training in Private Sector Britain?', with Alison Booth (2007), Research in Labor Economics, 26, 85-123.

'Testing Some Predictions of Human Capital Theory: New Training Evidence from Britain', with Alison Booth (2005), Review of Economics and Statistics, 87(2), 391-394.

'Training and the New Minimum Wage', with Wiji Arulampalam and Alison Booth (2004), Economic Journal, 114(494), C87-C96.*

'Training in Europe', with Wiji Arulampalam and Alison Booth (2004), Journal of the European Economic Association, 2(2-3), 346-360.

'The Union Membership Wage Premium Puzzle: Is there a Free-Rider Problem?', with Alison Booth (2004), Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 57(3), 401-421.

* This is an electronic version of an article
published in Royal Economic Society complete citation information for the final version of the paper, as published in the print edition of Royal Economic Society, is available on the Blackwell Synergy online delivery service, accessible via the journal's website at http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/ or
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Working paper versions are available at EconPapers.