SLLS Longitudinal Studies International Showcase
As part of the Society's 10th Anniversary week of events in October 2020, the SLLS Cohort Network hosted an all day workshop showcasing a number of cohort studies from across the world. You can view the showcase programme here and the talks below.
Workshop Programme

Part 1: Child and Youth Cohort Studies
Growing Up in Australia, Ten to Men
and Building a New Life in Australia
Galina Daraganova & Karena Jessup (Australian Institute of Family Studies)


French Longitudinal Study of Children (ELFE)
Lidia Panico (Institut National d'Etudes Demographiques)
Longitudinal Surveys of Australian Youth
Ronnie Semo (National Centre for Vocational Education Research)



Growing Up in Scotland
Paul Bradshaw (Scottish Centre
for Social Research)
Generation R Study
Janine Felix (Erasmus University Rotterdam)
Growing Up in Ireland
Amanda Quail (Economic and Social Research Institute)
Amsterdam Born Children and their Development (ABCD) Study
Tanja Vrijkotte (Amsterdam UMC)

Part 2: Adult Cohort Studies



45 and Up Study: Large Australian Longitudinal Linkage Study of People Age 45 Years and Over
Margo Barr (University of New South Wales) and Kerrin Bleicher (Sax Institute)
Education as a Lifelong Process: The German National Educational Panel Study (NEPS)
Daniel Fuss and Götz Lechner (Leibniz Institute for Educational Trajectories)
Fragile Families and Child WellBeing Study
Jane Waldfogel (Columbia University)



Two Birth Cohort Studies, 20 Years Apart: Growing up in Québec and Québec Longitudinal Study of Child Development
Nancy Illick & Bertrand Perron (Institut de la statistique du Québec)
British Cohort Studies: 1958, 1970, 1990 and 2000
Richard Silverwood (UCL Centre
for Longitudinal Studies)
A Prospective Life-Span Study With a Particular Population Living in the North-Eastern Alps of Italy
Federica Turatto (University of Padua)
Part 3: Adult and Older Adult Cohort Studies





Panel Study of Income Dynamics, Child Development Supplement and Transitions to Adulthood Supplement
Noura Insolera (University of Michigan)
Northern Ireland Cohort for the Longitudinal Study of Ageing: Understanding Today for a Healthier Tomorrow
Charlotte Neville (Queens University Belfast)
Million Women Study
Sarah Floud (University of Oxford)
SWEOLD Study
Carin Lennartson
(Stockholm University)
National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979
Deborah Carr (Boston University)
Alberta's Tomorrow Project and the Canadian Partnership for Tomorrow’s Health (CanPath)
Jennifer Vena (Alberta Health Services)
