- IGC and IPA have builta simple survey modulethat can be used to measure the impact of the crisis on a variety of economic agents e.g., large companies, informal and small businesses, self-employed, workers, and farmers. Using this module by researchers will allow for collecting comparable data across countries.
- The EEA encourages researchers and institutions to send a short description of research projects that are in progress and involve gathering and analyzing data during the COVID-19 crisis. The EEA registry can be accessedhere.
- Conducting Online Surveys in the time of a Pandemic: The Dos and Don’tsby Iffat Zahan and Maria Matin
- Ablog articleby Markus Goldstein and Florence Kondylis on Impact evaluations in the time of Covid-19
- Ablog articleon what to do with ongoing field research when a crisis hits by David Mckenzie and Berk Özler
- Practical tips for implementing remote surveys in the time of the great lockdownby Maria Jones, Roshni Khincha, Florence Kondylis, and Lysca Uwamariya
- Kristen Himeleinm Stephanie Eckman, Charles Lau, and David Mckenzie discuss in two blogs different aspects related to mobile phone surveys (Part 1) (Part 2)
- Best practices for conducting phone Surveyssummarized by Sarah Kopper and Anja Sautmann
- Gender and COVID-19: Where Can Research Help?By Jemimah Njuki
- Opinion: Without gender data, we leave critical COVID-19 clues on the tableby Björn Andersson and Mohammad Naciri
- Introduction: research in the time of Covid-19by Sören Jeppesena and Jason Miklia
- A post-pandemic research agendaby Steven Hill
- Technology feature from Springer Nature onArtificial-intelligence tools aim to tame the coronavirus literatureby Matthew Hutson
- COVID-19 research: are we moving too fast?While getting new information on COVID-19 is essential, not all research will be critical to managing the risks of the disease, writes Peter Howley
- Why maps matter in our response to COVID-19罗伯特•穆加Founder, SecDev Group and Igarapé Institute
- COVID-19 human challenge studies: ethical issuesby Euzebiusz Jamrozik and Prof Michael J Selgelid
- Carrying out qualitative research under lockdown – Practical and ethical considerations亚当·乔维特