Bilal Nasim

ORCID: 0000-0001-6558-659X
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Homelessness and Social Issues
  • Health disparities and outcomes
  • Housing Market and Economics
  • Housing, Finance, and Neoliberalism
  • Geriatric Care and Nursing Homes
  • Child Welfare and Adoption
  • Intergenerational and Educational Inequality Studies
  • Urban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies
  • Early Childhood Education and Development
  • Education Systems and Policy
  • Employment and Welfare Studies
  • Cognitive Abilities and Testing
  • Child Abuse and Trauma
  • Financial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis
  • Rural development and sustainability
  • Retirement, Disability, and Employment
  • Youth Education and Societal Dynamics
  • Chronic Disease Management Strategies
  • Education in Diverse Contexts
  • Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving
  • Birth, Development, and Health
  • Educational Assessment and Improvement
  • Global Health Care Issues
  • Noise Effects and Management
  • Climate Change and Health Impacts

University College London
2015-2022

Health Data Research UK
2015-2017

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
2016

Imperial College London
2012

Abstract The research on intergenerational correlations in outcomes is increasingly moving from measurement into assessment of causal transmission mechanisms. This paper analyses the impact fathers' job loss their children's educational attainment and later economic outcomes. To do so, we isolate effect associated with major industry contractions, mainly manufacturing, during recession 1980s by mapping industry‐level employment change data 1980 to 1983 British Cohort Study (BCS). Children...

10.1111/j.1475-5890.2012.00160.x article EN Fiscal Studies 2012-06-01

Placement in out-of-home care (OHC) indicates serious childhood adversity and is associated with multiple adverse outcomes. Each year 0.5% of children England live OHC but evidence lacking on the cumulative proportion who enter during how this varies over time. We measured born between 1992 2011 entered OHC, including variation rates entry time, explored determinants these changes using decomposition methods. also described placement type, duration stability. By age 18, 3.3% 1992–94 OHC....

10.1016/j.chiabu.2015.10.020 article EN cc-by Child Abuse & Neglect 2015-11-14

This article investigates the influence of wealth, a frequently neglected aspect economic circumstances families, on children’s development. Using UK Millennium Cohort Study, it explores whether parental wealth (net total net housing financial and house value) is associated with cognitive ability, mental, physical health at age 11 ( N = 8,645), over above socioeconomic status resources, in particular permanent income. Housing was fewer emotional behavioral problems, independent full set...

10.1111/cdev.13413 article EN cc-by Child Development 2020-09-16

Exiting and re-entering out-of-home care (OHC) is considered a disruption to permanence which may have long-lasting, negative consequences for children due lack of stability continuity. Each year approximately one-third in OHC England exit, but information lacking on rates re-entries associated factors. Using national administrative data, we calculated re-entry among exiting from 2007 2012, identified key child factors with using Cox proportional hazards modelling, developed simple...

10.1016/j.chiabu.2016.11.012 article EN cc-by Child Abuse & Neglect 2016-11-28

This study draws on the nationally representative British Birth Cohort Study (BCS70) to examine (1) association between social background and early socio‐emotional cognitive competences at age 5 (2) relative independent contributions of educational socio‐economic attainment in adulthood. A multi‐dimensional (multiple exposure, multiple outcome) approach is adopted conceptualising background, childhood adult outcomes by 42. Indicators include parental education, class, employment status,...

10.1002/berj.3724 article EN British Educational Research Journal 2021-05-04

This is the first review of evidence, based on longitudinal studies in United Kingdom, association ill health at any life stage and later social economic outcomes. The included a wide range physical mental exposures, both self-reported objectively measured, as well (e.g. satisfaction) employment) We searched Web Science, key datasets UK, major journals, Google Scholar reference lists relevant publications. includes 80 studies. There was strong evidence for between early health, mainly...

10.1371/journal.pone.0209659 article EN cc-by PLoS ONE 2018-12-31

The COVID-19 pandemic has inequitably impacted the experiences of people living with ill health/impairments or from minoritized ethnic groups across all areas life. Given possible parallels in inequities for disabled and backgrounds, their existence before increase since, discriminations that each group faces, our interest is understanding interplay between being AND a group.The overarching aim Coronavirus Chronic Conditions Disabilities Awareness (CICADA) project, building on this...

10.2196/38361 article EN cc-by JMIR Research Protocols 2022-04-12

In recent decades, social housing in the UK has increasingly become preserve of poorest society. This paper is first to investigate how child outcome penalties associated with tenure have changed over time across cohorts. I compare differences cognitive, mental health, and physical health outcomes children non-social evaluate whether these between 1970 British Cohort Study (BCS) 2000 Millennium (MCS). find that both cohorts, exhibit worse all three dimensions (cognitive, health) than...

10.1080/10796126.2020.1735626 article EN Journal of Children and Poverty 2020-01-02

ABSTRACT
 ObjectivesIn England, approximately one in thirty children spend time out-of-home care (OHC) by age 18.Use of OHC is known to vary across the country, which may be explained part ethnic group differences risk being placed OHC. This study uses linked administrative data determine whether local variation cumulative proportion distribution populations.
 Approach Administrative social records from January 1, 1992 December 31, 2012 for a one-third sample were...

10.23889/ijpds.v1i1.273 article EN cc-by International Journal for Population Data Science 2017-04-18

ABSTRACT
 ObjectivesIn England, approximately one in thirty children spend time out-of-home care (OHC) by age 18.Use of OHC is known to vary across the country, which may be explained part ethnic group differences risk being placed OHC. This study uses linked administrative data determine whether local variation cumulative proportion distribution populations.
 Approach Administrative social records from January 1, 1992 December 31, 2012 for a one-third sample were...

10.23889/ijpds.v1i1.265 article EN cc-by International Journal for Population Data Science 2017-04-18

<sec> <title>BACKGROUND</title> The COVID-19 pandemic has inequitably impacted the experiences of people living with ill health/impairments or from minoritized ethnic groups across all areas life. Given possible parallels in inequities for disabled and backgrounds, their existence before increase since, discriminations that each group faces, our interest is understanding interplay between being AND a group. </sec> <title>OBJECTIVE</title> overarching aim Coronavirus Chronic Conditions...

10.2196/preprints.38361 preprint EN 2022-03-29
Coming Soon ...