Curriculum Vitae Daron Acemoglu
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The Neumann Lecture (By Prof. Glenn C. Loury, Brown University)*
The Neumann Lecture (by Prof. Glenn C. Loury, Brown University)* My lecture tonight will be about race and racial inequality in the United States. I will try to give you some idea of what I think I'm contributing to the study of this subject in my work. In order to do that I need to give some background, to create something of an intellectual context into which my work will fit. Indeed, I will begin by describing some aspects of the work of last year's von Neumann laureate – the renowned economist Gary S. Becker of the University of Chicago, who has addressed himself over the past few decades to related questions. Then I will try to convince you that my ideas extend and amplify and deepen Becker’s work. But I don't think it will be enough just to talk about my ideas. I think one also has to talk about what might be done about this situation – about the politics and the morality, the social morality, the social ethics that are raised by this question of social division, of “race,” within a society. I am aware that here in Hungary you know something about this question. I spent some time just today with the Minister of Equal Opportunities and her staff discussing the Roma question, and nationalities questions, and inequality questions that pertain to Hungary. I don't know very much about those things and I won't be speaking about those things directly here. I will be talking about the United States, which is the case that I know best. -
Matthew O. Jackson
Matthew O. Jackson Department of Economics Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6072 (650) 723-3544, fax: 725-5702, [email protected] http://www.stanford.edu/ jacksonm/ ⇠ Personal: Born 1962. Married to Sara Jackson. Daughters: Emilie and Lisa. Education: Ph.D. in Economics from the Graduate School of Business, Stanford Uni- versity, 1988. Bachelor of Arts in Economics, Summa Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa, Princeton University, 1984. Full-Time Appointments: 2008-present, William D. Eberle Professor of Economics, Stanford Univer- sity. 2006-2008, Professor of Economics, Stanford University. 2002-2006, Edie and Lew Wasserman Professor of Economics, California Institute of Technology. 1997-2002, Professor of Economics, California Institute of Technology. 1996-1997, IBM Distinguished Professor of Regulatory and Competitive Practices MEDS department (Managerial Economics and Decision Sci- ences), Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Northwestern Univer- sity. 1995-1996, Mechthild E. Nemmers Distinguished Professor MEDS, Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Northwestern University. 1993-1994 , Professor (MEDS), Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Northwestern University. 1991-1993, Associate Professor (MEDS), Kellogg Graduate School of Man- agement, Northwestern University. 1988-1991, Assistant Professor, (MEDS), Kellogg Graduate School of Man- agement, Northwestern University. Honors : Jean-Jacques La↵ont Prize, Toulouse School of Economics 2020. President, Game Theory Society, 2020-2022, Exec VP 2018-2020. Game Theory Society Fellow, elected 2017. John von Neumann Award, Rajk L´aszl´oCollege, 2015. Member of the National Academy of Sciences, elected 2015. Honorary Doctorate (Doctorat Honoris Causa), Aix-Marseille Universit´e, 2013. Dean’s Award for Distinguished Teaching in Humanities and Sciences, Stanford, 2013. Distinguished Teaching Award: Stanford Department of Economics, 2012. -
CURRICULUM VITAE of OLIVER E. WILLIAMSON May 2013 PRESENT
CURRICULUM VITAE OF OLIVER E. WILLIAMSON May 2013 PRESENT POSITION Professor of the Graduate School and Edgar F. Kaiser Professor Emeritus of Business, Economics and Law, University of California, Berkeley. EDUCATION S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1955 M.B.A., Stanford University, 1960 Ph.D., Carnegie-Mellon University (Economics), 1963 AWARDS, PRIZES, AND FELLOWSHIPS Honorary Societies Fellow, The Berkeley Fellows, 2013 Nobel Laureate in the Economic Sciences, 2009. Fellow, American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1997. Member, National Academy of Sciences, 1995. Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1983. Fellow, Econometrics Society, 1977. 1 Prizes Grande Cruz, awarded by the Congress of Peru, 2011. Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences, 2009. Horst Claus Recktenwald Prize in Economics, 2004. 1983 Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in Law and Economics, Miami University. Ford Foundation Dissertation Prize, 1963. Honorary Degrees Docteur Honoris Causa, University of Paris-Dauphine, 2012. Honorary Doctor of Economics and Organization, Carnegie-Mellon University, 2011. Honorary Professor, Tsinghua University, SEM, 2010. Doctoris Honoris Causa in Economics, Nice University, 2005. Doctoris Honoris Causa in Economics, Valencia University, 2004. Doctoris Honoris Causa in Economics, University of Chile, 2000. Honorary Doctorate in Economics and Business Administration, Copenhagen Business School, 2000. Doctoris Honoris Causa, Groupe HEC (Paris), 1997. Doctoris Honoris Causa in Business Administration, St. Petersburg University, Russia, 1997. Doctoris Honoris Causa in Economics, Turku School of Economics and Business Administration, 1995. Doctoris Honoris Causa in Economic Science, Groningen University, 1989. Doctoris Honoris Causa in Economic Science, Hochschule St. Gallen, 1987. Oeconomiae Doctorem Honoris Causa, Ph.D., Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration, Jubilee Celebration, 1986. -
Joshua D. Angrist (01/2021)
Joshua D. Angrist (01/2021) Current Positions Ford Professor of Economics, MIT, from July 2008. Professor, MIT Economics Department, July 1998-2008. Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research, from 1994. Co-Director, MIT School Effectiveness and Inequality Initiative, from Fall 2011. Previous Positions Wesley Clair Mitchell Visiting Professor, Department of Economics, Columbia, Fall 2018. Visiting Professor, Harvard Lab for Economic Applications and Policy, 2011-12. Lady Davis Fellow, Hebrew University, 2004-05. Associate Professor, MIT Economics Department, 1996-98. Associate Professor, Hebrew University Economics Department, 1995-96. Visiting Associate Professor, MIT Economics Department, 1994-95. Senior Lecturer in Economics, Hebrew University Economics Department, 1991-95. Assistant Professor, Harvard University Economics Department, 1989-91. Faculty Research Fellow, National Bureau of Economic Research, 1989-94. Education Ph.D., Economics, Princeton University, October 1989. M.A., Economics, Princeton University, May 1987. B.A., Economics with Highest Honors, Oberlin College, June 1982. Teaching, Professional Service, and Public Service Teaching, Graduate Econometrics, Columbia, Fall 2018; Graduate and Undergraduate Labor Economics and Econometrics, MIT, 1994-95, 1996-2004, 2005-20; Graduate Econometrics and Graduate and Undergraduate Labor Economics, Hebrew University, 1991-96; Graduate Labor Economics and Undergraduate Econometrics courses, Harvard University, 1989-91. Referee, Addison-Wesley, American Economic Review, -
Intelligence and Artificial Intelligence
We invite applications to participate in the 4th Intercontinental Academia dedicated to Intelligence and Artificial Intelligence Opening online session: 13-18 June 2021 1st workshop in Paris, France: 18-27 October 2021 2nd workshop in Belo Horizonte, Brazil: 6-15 June 2022 Call for fellows Deadline: March 31, 2021 (6 pm CET) The Intercontinental Academia (ICA) seeks to create a global network of future research leaders in which some of the very best early/mid-career scholars will work together on paradigm-shifting cross-disciplinary research, mentored by some of the most eminent researchers from across the globe. In order to achieve this high objective, we organize in a year three immersive and intense sessions. The experience is expected to transform the scholar's own approach to research, enhance their awareness of the work, relevance and potential impact of other disciplines, and to inspire and facilitate new collaborations between distant disciplines. Our aim is to make a real, yet volatile, intellectual cocktail that leads to meaningful exchange and long-lasting outputs. The theme Intelligence and Artificial Intelligence have been selected to provide a framework for stimulating intellectual exchange in 2021-2022. The past decades have witnessed an impressive progress in cognitive science, neuroscience and artificial intelligence. Beside the decisive scientific advances that have been accomplished in the analysis of brain activity and its behavioral counterparts or in the information processing sciences (machine learning, wearable sensors…), several fundamental and broader questions of deep interdisciplinary nature have been arising. As artificial intelligence and neuroscience/cognitive science seem to show significant complementarities, a key question is to inquire to which extent these complementarities should drive research in both areas and how to optimize synergies. -
Mariana Mazzucato
PROFESSOR MARIANA MAZZUCATO HIGHER EDUCATION 1999 PhD. Economics, New School for Social Research, NY 1994 Masters in Economics, New School for Social Research, NY 1990 Bachelor of Arts, History/International Relations, Tufts University, Boston ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS 2017- Professor in Economics of Innovation and Public Value, University College London 2011- 2017 RM Phillips Professor in Economics of Innovation, SPRU, University of Sussex 2005-2011 Professor of Economics (Chair in Economics of Innovation), The Open University 2010-2013 Distinguished Visiting Professor, University of Edinburgh, Scotland 2008-2010 Visiting Professor, Bocconi University, Milan, Italy 2003-2004 Senior Lecturer, Economics, The Open University 1999-2002 Lecturer, Economics, The Open University 1998-1999 Post-Doctoral Marie Curie (EC) Research Fellow, London Business School, UK 1997-1999 Assistant Professor (tenure track), Economics, University of Denver, CO 1995-1997 Adjunct Professor, Economics, New York University, NY Honorary Degrees (Doctor Honoris Causa) Simon Fraser University, Canada, 2020 (ceremony 10/2020) York University, UK, 2020 (ceremony 9/2020) Hasselt University, Belgium, 2017 National University of San Martín, Argentina, 2016 RESEARCH MANAGEMENT 2017- Director and Founder, Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose, University College London 2010-2012 Economics Director, ESRC Centre for Social and Economic Research on Innovation in Genomics (INNOGEN), www.genomicsnetwork.ac.uk/innogen 2009-2012 Coordinator of European Commission FP7 Collaborative Project on Finance, Innovation and Growth (FINNOV) 2004-2009 Founder and Director, Innovation, Knowledge and Development (IKD), inter-faculty research centre, The Open University, www.open.ac.uk/ikd 2004-2008 Director of Research, Department of Economics, The Open University PUBLICATIONS Books Mazzucato, M. (2018) The Value of Everything, Penguin, Allen Lane-Penguin, London, ISBN: 978-0- 241-1888-1 https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/280466/the-value-of-everything/ Jacobs, M. -
Timbesleycvjanuary2016.Pdf
January 2016 Curriculum Vitae TIMOTHY J. BESLEY Department of Economics London School of Economics London WC2A 2AE Tel: (020) 7955 6702 Fax: (020) 7955 6951 Principal Current Positions: School Professor of Economics and Political Science, LSE, (since 2012) W. Arthur Lewis Professor of Development Economics, LSE, (since 2015) Education: 1972-1979: Aylesbury Grammar School, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire 1983: B.A. (M.A., 1987) Philosophy, Politics and Economics (1st Class), Keble College, Oxford University 1985: M.Phil., Economics, Oxford University 1987: D.Phil., Economics, Oxford University Past Employment: Kuwait Professor of Economics and Political Science, LSE, 2007-2011 External Member (part-time), Monetary Policy Committee, Bank of England 2006-9 Professor of Economics and Political Science, LSE, 1997-2007 Professor of Economics, LSE, 1995-1997 Assistant Professor of Economics and International Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School and Economics Department, Princeton University, 1989-95. Honours/Awards: Honorary Fellow, Keble College, Oxford (2013) Foreign Honorary Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2011) Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) (2010) John von Neumann Award (2010) Foreign Honorary Member, American Economic Association (2007) Yrjö Jahnsson Award (joint-winner 2005) Honorary Doctor, University of Zurich (2005) Fellow of the European Economic Association (2005) Duncan Black Prize for paper “On the Public Choice Critique of Welfare Economics”, (with Stephen Coate), (2003) Fellow of the British Academy (2001) Fellow of the Econometric Society (2000) Richard Musgrave Prize (inaugural winner) for paper “Sales Taxes and Prices: An Empirical Analysis,” (with Harvey Rosen), (2000) Cyril E. Black Preceptorship in the Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University, (1993- 96) Alfred P. -
Cooperation and Discrimination in Academic Publishing
COOPERATION AND DISCRIMINATION IN ACADEMIC PUBLISHING A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Boontarika Paphawasit Department of Economics and Finance College of Business, Arts and Social Sciences Brunel University London, UK June 2017 ABSTRACT This thesis consists of four essays in collaboration and discrimination. The first essay examines the role of collaboration as a determinant of publication productivity in the field of economics, measured by means of citations, journal rank, and journal impact factor. The analysis employs cross-sectional data of 1,512 journal publications published in 2012 in 16 economics journals. The findings show a positive effect of team size on publication productivity, whereas research teams consisting of only one gender perform better in terms of research quality than gender-mixed teams. The analysis also indicates a negative relationship between female-dominated teams and research productivity. The second essay examines the impact of physical attractiveness on productivity. As literature found a strong impact on wages and career progression, it can be either due to discrimination in favour of good-looking people or can reflect an association between attractiveness and productivity. We utilise a context of academic publishing where there is no or limited face-to-face interaction. Using data on 2,800 authors, the results suggest that physical attractiveness has significantly important benefits. The third essay also considers the effect of physical attractiveness, as assessed based on pictures of top scientists, on their probability of winning the Nobel Prize. In contrast, the results show that attractiveness is negatively correlated with the probability of being awarded the Nobel, with the magnitude of this effect being not negligible. -
CURRICULUM VITAE DARON ACEMOGLU Institute Professor Department of Economics, E52-446 Massachusetts Institute of Technology the M
CURRICULUM VITAE DARON ACEMOGLU Institute Professor Department of Economics, E52-446 Massachusetts Institute of Technology The Morris and Sophie Chang Building 50 Memorial Drive Cambridge, MA 02142 Tel: 1-617-253-1927 Fax: 1-617-253-1330 Web: http://econ-www.mit.edu/faculty/?prof_id=acemoglu E-mail: [email protected] PERSONAL DATE OF BIRTH: September 3, 1967 NATIONALITY: U.S. and Turkish. EDUCATION: INSTITUTION DEGREE DATE London School of Economics Ph.D. Nov., 1992 London School of Economics MSc. June, 1990 University of York B.A. June, 1989 TITLE OF DOCTORAL THESIS: Essays in Microfoundations of Macroeconomics: Contracts and Economic Performance PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE ACADEMIC POSITIONS 1992-1993 Lecturer in Economics, London School of Economics 1993-1997 Assistant Professor of Economics, M.I.T. 1997-2000 Pentti Kouri Associate Professor of Economics, M.I.T. 2000-2004 Professor of Economics, M.I.T. 2004-2010 Charles P. Kindleberger Professor of Applied Economics, M.I.T. 2010-2019 Elizabeth and James Killian Professor of Economics, M.I.T. 2019-present MIT Institute Professor FIELDS OF INTEREST Political Economy, Economic Development, Economic Growth, Economic Theory, Technology, Income and Wage Inequality, Human Capital and Training, Labor Economics, Network Economics. AWARDS AND GRANTS AWARDS, PRIZES AND HONORS -Adam Smith Memorial Prize, University of York 1989 -Head of Department's Special Prize, University of York 1989 -C.K. Hobson Scholarship, London School of Economics 1990 -Robert McKenzie Prize, London School of Economics 1990 -Robert McKenzie Prize, London School of Economics 1992 -Best Paper Published in the Economic Journal, 1994-1995 for “Consumer Confidence and Rational Expectations: Are Agents' Beliefs Consistent With the Theory?” 1996 -T. -
Jon Elster: Curriculum Vitae 1 / 1 5 25.02.2004
Jon Elster: Curriculum Vitae 1 / 1 5 25.02.2004 Jon Elster: Curriculum Vitae Civil Status Born February 22 1940 in Oslo, Norway. Citizen of Norway. Resident of Norway. Married. Academic degrees Mag.art.(philosophy) from the University of Oslo, 1966. Thesis: "Prise de conscience dans la Phénoménologie de l'Esprit de Hegel". Docteur ès lettres et sciences sociales from the University of Paris V, 1972. Thesis: "Production et reproduction: Essai sur Marx". Positions held Research fellow, Norwegian Research Council, 1968-1971. Boursier du gouvernement français, 1968-1971. Pensionnaire étranger, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, 1968-1971. Research Fellow, University of Oslo, 1971-1973. Visiting associate professor of philosophy, University of California, Berkeley, 1973, 1977. Associate professor of sociology, University of Paris VIII, 1973-1977 Associate professor of history and philosophy, University of Oslo 1975-1985 Visiting professor of philosophy, Stanford University, 1977. Visiting director of studies, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, 1978, 1980, 1981,1982, 1983, 1987, 1988. Visiting professor of political science, University of Chicago, 1979, 1981,1983 Member, Norwegian Academy of Sciences, since 1981 Visiting fellow, All Souls College, Oxford, 1982 Professor of political science and philosophy, University of Chicago, 1984-1995 (1989- 1995: Edward L.Ryerson Distinguished Service Professor). Research director, Institute for Social Research, Oslo, 1984 to present. Visiting professor of philosophy, California Institute of Technology, 1984 Jon Elster: Curriculum Vitae 2 / 1 5 25.02.2004 Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, since 1988 John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship awarded for 1989. Member, Academia Europaea since 1989 Adjunct Professor, Department of Economics, University of Oslo, 1990-92. -
View Full Festival Program
updated 12 May THE RETURN OF THE STATE Businesses, communities and institutions TRENTO 2021 3-6 June PROVINCIA AUTONOMA DI TRENTO The relationship between the state and the economy has always been something of a seesaw. As a general rule, in times of crisis – and here we need only think of the Wall Street crash in 1929, but also the 2008 international financial crisis – public authorit- ies have had to intervene to sort out the disasters caused by a market without rules, or with rules that are too ineffective. In contrast, in times of expansion, the “invisible hand” of the market is usually left free to act, creating and redistributing wealth. Hence the state is invited to take one or several steps back, limiting itself to “regulating the traffic”, creating the most fa- vourable conditions for economic forces to free all their energy, and their aggression, ultimately considered to be beneficial. The pandemic undoubtedly took us back to the first of the two scenarios, but this time in a particular context: on this occasion the state entered the fray not to deal with the negative effects of a recession, but rather to combat a deadly serious health emer- gency, of the kind not faced by the world for around a century. Inevitably, however, the health emergency has also led to a devastating economic crisis. Consequently, the state has been called on to act in two contexts: in the field of health, but also in rela- tion to economic recovery, which must be brought about, encouraged and stimulated at all costs. -
VITA ALVIN E. ROTH November 2020 DATE of BIRTH
VITA ALVIN E. ROTH November 2020 DATE OF BIRTH: 18 December 1951 MARITAL STATUS: Married, two children CITIZENSHIP: USA ADDRESS: Dept of Economics [email protected] Stanford University (650) 725-9147 Stanford, CA 94305-6072 http://www.stanford.edu/~alroth/ EDUCATION: Stanford University, Ph.D., 1974 (Operations Research) Stanford University, M.S., 1973 (Operations Research) Columbia University, B.S., 1971 (Operations Research) PRINCIPAL EMPLOYMENT: 1/13- Craig and Susan McCaw Professor of Economics, Department of Economics, Stanford University Senior Fellow, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research; Professor, by courtesy, Management Science and Engineering 9/12-12/12 McCaw Senior Visiting Professor of Economics, Department of Economics, Stanford 12/12- George Gund Professor of Economics and Business Administration Emeritus, Harvard University. 8/98-12/12 George Gund Professor of Economics and Business Administration, Department of Economics, Harvard University, and Harvard Business School. 8/82 – 8/98 A.W. Mellon Professor of Economics, University of Pittsburgh. Also; Fellow, Center for Philosophy of Science (from 4/83); and (from 1/85) Professor of Business Administration, Graduate School of Business, University of Pittsburgh. 8/79 - 8/82 Professor, Department of Business Administration and Department of Economics, and (from 8/81) Beckman Associate, Center for Advanced Study, University of Illinois. 8/74 - 7/79 Assistant Professor and (from 8/77) Associate Professor, Department of Business Administration and Department of Economics, University of Illinois. 2 OTHER APPOINTMENTS: 1/78 - 6/78 Institute Associate at the Institute for Mathematical Studies in the Social Sciences, Stanford University. 5/86 Mendes-France Visiting Professor of Economics, The Technion, Haifa, Israel.