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Department Seminars
Working paper series

Economics Department Seminar Series, Spring 2007

All seminars will be on Fridays from 3:30-5:00 pm in Academic A, Room G008 unless noted otherwise
Note: You need Acrobat Reader to be able to read papers that are online.
Date
Speaker
Affiliation
Paper Title
January 26
Greg Clark UC Davis Genetically Capitalist?  The Malthusian Era and the Evolution of Modern Economic Preferences
January 29
Arnaud Dellis University of Hawaii Would Letting People Vote for Several Candidates Yield Policy Moderation? (Monday, in AAG019)
January 31
Daniel Sgroi University of Cambridge The Optimal Choice of Pre-Launch Reviewer (Wednesday, in AAG019)
February 5
Tigran Melkonyan University of Maryland Smoothing Preference Kinks with Information (Monday, in AAG019)
February 9
Steve Ross University of Connecticut Identifying Individual and Group Effects in the Presence of Sorting: A Neighborhood Effects Application
February 12
Ingela Alger Boston College The Fetters of the Sib (Monday, in in AAG019)
February 16
Kalena Cortes Syracuse University College Quality and the Texas Top 10% Plan: Implications for Minority Students
February 19
Fred Donatelli Binghamton University Ph.D. Prospectus Paper #1, Paper #2 (Monday, in AAG019)
February 23
Gary Fields Cornell University Minimum Wages and Poverty with Income-Sharing
February 26
Edward Vytlacil Columbia University Treatment Effect Bounds: An Application to Swan-Ganz Catherization (Monday, in AAG007)
March 2
Richard Steckel Ohio State University Skeletons in Economic History: Some Results and a Research Agenda Background Paper #1, Background Paper #2 (in SL210 at 10:00am)
March 19
Xu Zhang Binghamton University Ph.D. Prospectus (Monday, in AAG019)
March 22
Robert Wells Union College Facing the ‘King of Terrors’: Death and Society in an American Community, 1750-1990 (Thursday, in AD148 at 4:30)
March 26
Nadine McCloud Binghamton University Ph.D. Prospectus (Monday, in AAG019)
April 13
Jon Conrad Cornell University Global Warming Policy: Lessons from Dynamic Programming
April 20
Amit Batabyal RIT Trade, the Damage from Alien Species, and the Effects of Protectionism Under Alternate Market Structures
April 23
Andreas Pape University of Michigan Casual Coherence (Monday, in AAG019)
April 27
Betsey Stevenson University of Pennsylvania Divorce-Law Changes, Household Bargaining, and Married Women’s Labor Supply Revisited
May 4
Farley Grubb University of Delaware The Continental Dollar: How Much was Issued and What Happened to It?

Links to past seminar lists:
Fall 2006
Spring 2006
Fall 2005
Spring 2005
Fall 2004
Spring 2004
Fall 2003
Spring 2002
Fall 2001
Spring 2000



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Revised: January 16, 2007

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