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Henri Leridon
Henri Leridon, scientific integrity referent for INED, presents INED’s proposed charter on survey data accessibility (open science). (Interview conducted in May 2021)
Henri Leridon, scientific integrity referent for INED, presents INED’s proposed charter on survey data accessibility (open science). (Interview conducted in May 2021)
Interview with Christelle Avril, sociologist at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), and Mathieu Trachman, sociologist at INED, on the new Gender and Sexuality Studies EUR (École Universitaire de Recherche graduate school). (Interviewed in July 2020)
The research, led by Imperial College London and published in the journal Nature Medicine, analysed weekly death data from 21 industrialised countries between mid-February and end of May 2020.
INED senior researcher Valérie Golaz tells us about the COVID-19 indicators used in France
Jacques Vallin (directeur de recherche à l'Ined) vous parle de la progression de l'espérance de vie. Séminaire Ined autour de la parution du "Dictionnaire de démographie et des sciences de la population" (Armand Collin, 2011).
tells us about the upcoming World Population Day and the Millennium Development Goals
Twenty years after the last international conference on women, held in Beijing in 1995, has women’s overall situation really improved? The “Atlas Mondial des Femmes” brings to light “paradoxes of emancipation” in such diverse areas as education, health, the economy, politics and sexuality. In addition to marked geographical disparities, many advances in the direction of equality are found to be fragile, incomplete or paradoxical.
presents INED activities for the year 2015
It is difficult to count people who have no home, especially if they have no place of shelter at all and are sleeping in the street. To learn more about them, INSEE and INED conducted several surveys with users of shelters and free meal services. The surveys have found a considerable increase in the number of homeless in France since 2001.
Nearly six in ten households own their home in France. Homeownership rose considerably after World War II, then came to a standstill in the mid-1980s. Today, an increasing share of the population is finding it hard to buy a home.