16 January 2025
ADR UK is funding three Research Fellows to analyse the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) linked to the Census 2011 dataset. Their policy-relevant projects are investigating wage dynamics, employment patterns, and workforce inequality. The projects are the result of ADR UK Fellowship opportunities which invited applications to carry out research using eligible ADR England flagship datasets.
Read more
13 January 2025
ADR UK is funding an 18-month Research Fellowship to use a new linked dataset combining the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) with PAYE (Pay As You Earn) and Self-Assessment data from His Majesty's Revenue & Customs (HMRC). The project is the result of an ADR UK Fellowship opportunity which invited applications to carry out research using eligible ADR England flagship datasets.
9 January 2025
ADR UK is funding two Research Fellows to use the newly available Administrative Data | Agricultural Research Collection (AD|ARC) dataset to explore the socioeconomic characteristics and economic resilience of farming households. The successful Research Fellows, and the projects they carry out, are part of the ADR UK Fellowship programme, which promotes research using ADR UK flagship datasets.
31 October 2024
ADR UK is funding a 16-month Research Fellowship to conduct research using the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) Register linked to Census 2021 dataset. The project is a result of an ADR UK fellowship opportunity which invited applications to carry out research using eligible ADR England flagship datasets.
1 September 2023
ADR UK is funding six Research Fellows for 18 months to conduct research and analysis demonstrating the policy impact potential of ADR England flagship datasets. This was the first fellowship opportunity of its kind by ADR UK that...
13 February 2023
This project, led by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, will produce two new linked datasets on private pension saving that are high quality and accessible for approved research. The dataset will provide a comprehensive picture of how much money people in the UK are putting into personal pensions set against their employment type and total earnings. It will include employees as well as the self-employed, people working for their own companies and those not working.