Ekaterina Skoglund

Ekaterina Skoglund

Lecturer

  • PhD Degree in Economics, University of Turin

 ekaterina.skoglund@euruni.edu
LinkedIn | Munich Campus

Bio

Ekaterina Skoglund holds a PhD Degree in Economics from the University of Turin (Italy). She is a quantitatively oriented social scientist, whose research interests concentrate on various aspects of individual experience such as subjective well-being and welfare, individual choices, gender roles, discrimination and inequality, and sports. As a teacher, over the last 20 years, she has gained a broad experience in education and training working with students of various ages and levels, from high school to postgraduate university programs and young professors trainings. Ekaterina has developed and taught courses covering topics, from the basics of programming to the design and analysis of social surveys, and the economics of poverty.

Teaching Interests

  • Research methods
  • Marketing
  • Consumer Behaviour
  • Sports

Research Interests

  • Subjective well-being
  • Inequality
  • Gender roles

Publications

  • Fabrizio Pompei and Ekaterina Selezneva, “Skills mismatch and youth unemployment during the Great Recession: A comparative analysis between Western and Eastern European countries”, Journal of Policy Modeling, 2021, 43(2), pp. 448-473.
  • Ekaterina Skoglund and Astrid Bretthauer, “Starting early with language learning. Enhancing human capital and improving the integration of migrant families in the Danube region. Examples from Bavaria”, Suedosteuropa - Journal of Politics and Society, 2019, 67(2), pp. 234-263.
  • Ekaterina Selezneva,“The happiness gap between transition and nontransition countries”, IZA World of Labor 2017: 357
  • Ekaterina Selezneva and Philippe Van Kerm, “Inequality-adjusted wage differentials in East and West Germany”, The Journal of Economic Inequality, Vol. 14(1), 2016, pp. 21-40.
  • Cristiano Perugini and Ekaterina Selezneva, “Labour market institutions, crisis and gender earnings gap in Eastern Europe”, Economics of Transition, Vol. 23(3), 2015, pp. 517-564.
  • Ekaterina Selezneva, “Surveying transitional experience and subjective well-being: income, work, family”, Economic Systems, Vol. 35(2), June 2011, pp. 139-157.

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