News

“If you had a chance, would you leave Georgia for a certain period of time to live somewhere else?” According to Caucasus Barometer 2017, over half of the adult population of Georgia (55%) responded positively to this question.
The September issue of CRRC’s Data Bites newsletter is out.
Read about most popular blog posts of CRRC, media coverage and launch of new surveys in the September 2018 issue of CRRC’s monthly newsletter.
On Wednesday, March 21, at 18:30 Dustin Gilbreath will give a talk impact evaluation in agriculture: “Post-Hoc Blocking for Quasi-Experimental Impact Evaluation: An example from the Impact Evaluation of the Agricultural Support Program in Georgia”. This is the fourth talk…
CRRC-Georgia calls for proposals for “The 6th CRRC Methodological Conference: How Evidence-based Urban Policy Can Make Cities Inclusive, Just, and Livable” that will be held on June 22 2018 in Tbilisi, Georgia. The conference will bring together local and international…
On Wednesday, February 14, at 18:30 Koba Turmanidze will present his paper “Talk to them: How election campaigns increase partisanship in Georgia” at the third talk of the Spring 2018 Works-in-Progress series. The talk will explore the impact of party-voter linkages on…
CRRC-Georgia is announcing the vacancy of the Development Manager, who will work under the supervision of the President of CRRC-Georgia. The Development Manager leads the fundraising team and contributes to external communications and quality assurance of written outputs. This is a full time…
This week, 2017 Caucasus Barometer survey (CB) data will become publicly available on CRRC’s online data analysis portal. CB is the longest running survey project in the South Caucasus region, with data available from 2008 to present. It enables the comparison of…
This Wednesday, on January 24, 2018 at 18:30, CRRC, ARISC and American Councils are opening the Spring/Summer 2018 Works-in-Progress series with the first talk by Abel Polese from the Dublin City University, “The SCOPUS diaries and the (il)logics of academic survival. A…