Field-Of-Study: Economics
Monika Piazzesi
Monika Piazzesi is the Joan Kenny Professor of Eocnomics at Stanford University. She is the program director of the NBER Asset Pricing Program and a co-editor of the Journal of Political Economy. She is also a research affiliate for CEPR. In 2007–2008, she served as monetary advisor to the Federal Reserve Bnak of Minneapolis. Prior
Brett Walker
Brett L. Walker is Regents Professor of History at Montana State University, Bozeman. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Oregon and was assistant professor of history at Yale University prior to returning home to Big Sky Country. He teaches courses on environmental history, Japanese history, and world history. He has written three books
Jonathan Levin
Jonathan Levin is a Professor of Economics at Stanford University, where he is currently the Holbrook Working Professor of Price Theory and Chair of the Department of Economics. He also holds an appointment in the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Levin’s research is in industrial organization, the field of economics that studies imperfect competition and
Richard Grossman
Richard S. Grossman is Professor of Economics at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, and a Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard University. He is the author of Unsettled Account: The Evolution of Banking in the Industrialized World since 1800 (Princeton UP, 2010) and WRONG: Nine Economic Policy Disasters and What
D. Graham Burnett
D. Graham Burnett is an editor at Cabinet, the Brooklyn-based quarterly of art and culture; he teaches at Princeton University, where he holds an appointment as Professor of History and History of Science, and affiliations with the Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program in the Humanities (I-HUM), the School of Architecture, and the Princeton Environmental Institute. Burnett studies
James E. Rauch
James Rauch is an economist who has done research mainly in the areas of international trade, economic growth and development, and urban economics, and most recently in the area of entrepreneurship. A common theme of much of his work is how non-market interactions affect market outcomes. These non-market interactions may involve interpersonal or interfirm relationships,
Aleh Tsyvinski
I am currently a Professor of Economics at the Department of Economics at Yale University .At Yale, I also hold a position of a Co-Director of Macroeconomic Research Program at Cowles Foundation. I am a Research Associate at National Bureau of Economic Research. Previously, I taught at Harvard and UCLA. I have also been recognized
Arthur J. Robson
Arthur Robson’s research has revolved for twenty years around the belief that modern human economic behavior is best explained by considering biological and anthropological factors. Such a view was once heretical but is becoming more widely accepted within economics. Before joining the faculty of Simon Fraser University, Robson held a faculty position at the University
Jean Ensminger
Jean Ensminger is the Edie and Lew Wasserman Professor of Social Science at the California Institute of Technology. Her 1984 Ph.D. is from Northwestern University. Ms. Ensminger is a past President of the Society for Economic Anthropology and served as Division Chair for the Humanities and Social Sciences at Caltech from 2002-2006. She is known
Leonardo Gasparini
After receiving his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1997, Leonardo Gasparini returned to Argentina to join the faculty of the Universidad Nacional de La Plata as a Professor of Economics and the founding Director of its Center for Distributional, Labor and Social Studies (CEDLAS). Long concerned with poverty and inequality in Latin America, Mr. Gasparini has been a
Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg
Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg is the William K. Lanman, Jr. Professor of Economics at Yale University and Co-Editor of the American Economic Review. She is also Elected Fellow of the Econometric Society, Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), Member of the Board of the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development
Markus K. Brunnermeier
Markus K. Brunnermeier is the Edwards S. Sanford Professor at Princeton University. He is a faculty member of the Department of Economics and affiliated with Princeton’s Bendheim Center for Finance and the International Economics Section. He is also a research associate at CEPR, NBER, and CESifo, and a visiting scholar at the Federal Reserve Bank
William R. Zame
William Zame received his Ph.D. in Mathematics at Tulane (1970) and had a career in Pure Mathematics, holding appointments at Rice University, Tulane University, SUNY/Buffalo, and The Johns Hopkins University. He moved to Economics in the late 1980s and to UCLA in 1991, where he is currently Distinguished Professor of Economics and of Mathematics and
Robert A. Moffitt
Robert Moffitt is Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Economics at Johns Hopkins University, where he has worked since September 1995. Prior to assuming his position at Johns Hopkins, Professor Moffitt was Professor of Economics at Brown University, where he taught for eleven years. He has also been a visiting professor at the University of Wisconsin and the