I learn econometrics from the books and the recently published papers. I hope you find this information package helpful.
Regression discontinuity design
Books:
Chapter 21 at Hansen, B. E. (2010). Econometrics. University of Wisconsin. (LINK to author's website)
Papers:
Dehdari, S. H., & Gehring, K. (2022). The origins of common identity: Evidence from Alsace-Lorraine. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 14(1), 261-92., AER 2022 (LINK)
Bell, B., Costa, R., & Machin, S. (2022). Why does education reduce crime?. Journal of Political Economy, 130(3), 732-765.(LINK)
Akhtari, M., Moreira, D., & Trucco, L. (2022). Political turnover, bureaucratic turnover, and the quality of public services. American Economic Review, 112(2), 442-93., AER 2022 (LINK)
Silliman, M., & Virtanen, H. (2022). Labor market returns to vocational secondary education. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 14(1), 197-224. (LINK)
Regression kink design
Most relevant papers:
Card, D., Lee, D. S., Pei, Z., & Weber, A. (2015). Inference on causal effects in a generalized regression kink design. Econometrica, 83(6), 2453-2483. (LINK)
Landais, C. (2015). Assessing the welfare effects of unemployment benefits using the regression kink design. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 7(4), 243-78. (LINK) (with stata code provided)
Instrumental variables
Books and chapters:
Chapter 5 at Wooldridge, J. M. (2010). Econometric analysis of cross section and panel data. MIT press.
Angrist, J. D., & Pischke, J. S. (2008). Mostly harmless econometrics. Princeton university press. (LINK to video material at Part 3 on AEA web)
Papers:
Acemoglu, D., & Restrepo, P. (2022). Demographics and automation. The Review of Economic Studies, 89(1), 1-44. (LINK)
Ryan, N., & Sudarshan, A. (2022). Rationing the commons. Journal of Political Economy, 130(1), 210-257. (LINK)
Dippel, C., Gold, R., Heblich, S., & Pinto, R. (2021). The effect of trade on workers and voters. Economic Journal. (LINK)
Lee, J., Peri, G., & Yasenov, V. (2022). The labor market effects of Mexican repatriations: Longitudinal evidence from the 1930s. Journal of Public Economics, 205, 104558.(LINK)