

Munshi Sulaiman
Director of Research and Professor of the Master of Development Studies program, BRAC Institute of Governance and Development
Munshi Sulaiman, PhD, is the Director of Research and a Professor of the Master of Development Studies program at BRAC Institute of Governance and Development (BIGD), Brac University. His other affiliations include Advisor for The Agency Fund, and Research and Evaluation Advisor for Save the Children International.
Dr Sulaiman started his research career at BRAC’s Research and Evaluation Division (RED) in 2004. His last appointment was as the Director for Research, Monitoring and Learning at Save the Children in Somalia.
He has a PhD in Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). He was also a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Yale University. He has published extensively, including in top international economics journals on poverty, financial inclusion, and labour markets issues.
Recent work by Munshi Sulaiman
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Development Dialogues: Are vocational training programmes effective?
Have vocational training programmes in low- and middle-income countries been an effective development intervention?
Published 01.04.25
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Can agricultural extensions be discontinued? Evidence from Uganda
How should development programmes that attempt to disseminate improved technologies be phased out?
Published 05.04.23
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Lumpsum business grants for household resilience: Evidence from Somalia
Lumpsum cash transfers delivered as business grants can spur microentrepreneurial activities
Published 21.03.22
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Looking for work: Evidence from the Ugandan labour market
While vocational training helps young job seekers find work, overconfidence in finding a job has important long-term effects on job-seeking behaviour
Published 24.11.21
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Using role models to reshape gender attitudes: Evidence from schools in Somalia
Female role models improved gender attitudes and educational aspirations of primary school students, with particular impact on boy(s)/male students
Published 08.09.21
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Do social structures affect the success of development policies?
Policy delivery agents perform better when working with members of their own social groups thereby affecting the efficiency of policy interventions
Published 23.09.20
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The long debate on sharecropping and productivity
Increasing the tenant’s share in output encourages profitable risk-taking, in addition to large effects on input levels
Published 07.09.20
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Tackling youth unemployment: Vocational training versus apprenticeships
While both vocational training and apprenticeships raise employment of poor Ugandan youth and are cost-effective in the long run, vocational training has larger impacts
Published 13.02.18