Events
Peter Hammond – Retirement & Beyond
The conference is being organised by Robert Akerlof and Herakles Polemarchakis (Warwick) and the idea is to bring together a wide spectrum of people working in Economic theory broadly defined.
Date: Friday 2 – Sunday 4 December 2022
Friday 2 December
13.20 - 15.00 |
Lunch & Registration |
15.00-15.45 |
Claude d’Aspremont (Universite Catholique de Louvain) Title: Bayesian mechanism design revisited |
15.45-16.30 |
Françoise Forges (Université Paris-Dauphine) Title: Fifty six years of cheap talk |
16.30-16.50 |
Coffee Break |
16.50-17.35 |
Federica Liberini (QMUL) Title: Covid and Electoral Accountability |
17:35-18.20 |
Stefan Traub (HSU in Hamburg) Title: Economic Inequality and Cooperation: The Role of Homophily |
19:00 |
Evening Dinner (Speakers & invited participants only) |
Saturday 3 December
09.30-10.00 |
Arrival Refreshments |
10.00-10.45 |
Dimitri Migrow (University of Edinburgh) Title: Petitions, Political Participation, and Government Responsiveness |
10.45-11.30 |
Takashi Ui (Hitotsubashi University) Title: Impacts of Public Information on Flexible Information Acquisition |
11.30-11.50 |
Coffee Break |
11.50-12.35 |
Andres Carvajal (UC Davis) Title: Memorable Events in Financial Markets |
12.35-13.20 |
Praveen Kumar (University of Houston) Title: Strategic Information Transmission in Capital Markets and Investment Distortions |
13.20-15.00 |
Lunch |
15.00-15.45 |
Giovanni Facchini (Nottingham University) Title: The Franchise, Policing, and Race: Evidence from Arrests Data and the Voting Rights Act" (2022) |
15.45-16.30 |
Gerald Willmann (Bielefeld University) Title: The Farsighted Stability of Global Trade Policy Arrangements |
16.30-16.50 |
Coffee Break |
16:50-17:35 |
Jaume Sempere (El Colegio de México) Title: A remark on the gains from migration with incentive compatible compensation |
17:35-18:20 |
Debraj Ray (University of Warwick) Title: Measuring upward mobility |
19:00 |
Evening Dinner - Open to all |
Sunday 4 December
10.45-11.30 |
Ganna Pogrebna (Sydney University) Title: How to Change the World in Less than 50 Years: The Impact of Peter J. Hammond’s Work on Science and Practice from 1974 to 2022 |
11.30-11.50 |
Coffee Break |
11.50-12.35 |
John Broome (University of Oxford) Title: Temporal separability of value: its implications |
12.35-13.20 |
Marc Fleurbaey (Paris School of Economics) Will close the conference via Zoom |
13.20-15:00 |
Lunch & Goodbye |
Attendance is by invitation only for the time being. For any enquires, please contact Margaret Nash at M.J.Nash@warwick.ac.uk.