The Population and Poverty Research Network (PopPov) is a group of academic researchers and funders from around the globe interested in how population dynamics affect economic outcomes. We are investigating how population policies can influence poverty reduction at the household level and economic growth at the country/state level. The Eighth Annual Research Conference on Population, Reproductive Health and Economic Development will take place from January 22 – 25 in Nairobi, Kenya. Selected papers will advance knowledge and/or methodology, addressing the themes relevant to the PopPov inquiry into how population dynamics and reproductive health affect economic development (see references below).
Conference Themes
The conference scientific program steering committee invites paper submissions that address important issues at the intersection of population, reproductive health and economic prosperity. Applicants are to submit their papers to one of the five topical sessions described below. We strongly encourage studies that are methodologically innovative and are especially interested in new research that demonstrates novel empirical evidence or that raises emerging issues related to the overarching themes of the network. A bibliography of research outputs related to themes below may be found athttp://www.poppov.org/Research/Bibliography.aspx.
Session 1 - Health and non-health benefits of family planning: What are the benefits of family planning? Health benefits of family planning may range from reductions in maternal and child morbidity and mortality and improvements in child health and nutrition to improvements in female mental health status; some examples of non-health benefits include increases in female and child’s educational attainment, household productivity, and household savings.
Session 2 - Policy effects and benefits to reproductive health: To what extent are reproductive health benefits gained from removing user fees and health insurance? To what extent are reproductive health benefits gained as a result of performance based financing? What other financing policies have had reproductive health benefits? What methodological advances have been made in assessing policy effects?
Session 3 - Economic consequences of poor reproductive health or improvements in reproductive health access/outcomes. What are the economic ramifications of poor reproductive health status, of improvements in access to reproductive health programs, or of improvements in reproductive health outcomes? What is the magnitude of these economic consequences? 
Session 4 - Demographic transition, population growth, and economic growth: What are the trends in fertility and mortality changes, and what are their implications for economic growth, income distribution, and/or the incidence of poverty?
Session 5 – Other: Other topics relevant to the PopPov Research Network are welcome. We encourage studies that are methodologically innovative and welcome randomized evaluations, longitudinal analysis as well as analytical assessments of the literature. We are especially interested in new research that demonstrates novel empirical evidence or raises emerging issues that are related to the overarching themes of the network.
Instructions for Submission of Papers
Submit papers at http://www.conftool.net/PopPovConf2014/.
Minimum Submission Requirements:
Link: http://poppov.org/PopPovConferences/8thAnnualPopPovConference.aspx