National Bureau of Economic Research
NBER: 2009 North American Winter Meeting of the Econometric Society Call for Papers

2009 North American Winter Meeting of the Econometric Society Call for Papers

From: <sdurlauf_at_ssc.wisc.edu>
Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 12:09:46 -0600 (CST)

2009 NORTH AMERICAN WINTER MEETING OF THE ECONOMETRIC SOCIETY CALL FOR
PAPERS

January 3-5, 2009, San Francisco, CA

The 2009 North American Winter Meeting of the Econometric Society will
be held in San Francisco, CA, from January 3 to 5, 2009, as part of the
annual meeting of the Allied Social Science Associations. The program
will consist of contributed and invited papers. It is hoped that the
research presented will represent a broad spectrum of applied and
theoretical economics and econometrics. The program committee will
be chaired by Steven Durlauf of University of Wisconsin–Madison.

Prospective contributors are invited to submit titles and abstracts of
their papers by April 25, 2008. All abstracts are required to be
submitted electronically as plain text at the conference website:

https://editorialexpress.com/conference/NAWM2009

At least one co-author must be a member of the Society or must join
prior to submission. This can be done at www.econometricsociety.org.

Submitted abstracts should not be over 300 words in length. Each person
may submit only one paper, or be a co-author on multiple submissions
provided that if all such papers were accepted, no person would present
more than one paper. Abstracts should represent original manuscripts not
previously presented to any Econometric Society regional meeting or
submitted to other professional organizations for presentation at these
same meetings. The following information should also be provided
electronically at the time of submission: the authors' names,
affiliations, complete addresses, telephone and fax numbers; both the
email addresses and web sites (if any) of the submitters; the JEL
primary field name and number; and the paper title.

Program Committee:
Steven Durlauf, University of Wisconsin–Madison Program Chair
David Austen-Smith, Northwestern University (Political Economy)
Dirk Bergemann, Yale University (Information Economics)
Lawrence Blume, Cornell University (Game Theory)
Moshe Buchinsky, University of California, Los Angeles (Applied
Econometrics)
Dennis Epple, Carnegie Mellon University (Public Economics)
Oded Galor, Brown University (Economic Growth)
Jinyong Hahn, University of California, Los Angeles (Econometric Theory)
Caroline Hoxby, Stanford University (Social Economics)
Guido Kuersteiner, University of California, Davis (Time Series)
Jonathan Levin, Stanford University (Industrial Organization)
Shelly Lundberg, University of Washington (Labor Economics)
James Rauch, University of California, San Diego (International Trade)
Hélène Rey, Princeton University (International Finance)
Manuel Santos, University of Miami (Computational Economics)
Christina Shannon, University of California, Berkeley (Mathematical
Economics)
Steven Tadelis, University of California, Berkeley (Market Design)
Petra Todd, University of Pennsylvania (Microeconometrics/Empirical
Microeconomics)
Toni Whited, University of Wisconsin (Finance)
Noah Williams, Princeton University (Macroeconomics)
Justin Wolfers, Wharton (Behavioral Economics/Experimental Economics)
Tao Zha, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta (Macroeconomics)
Lin Zhou, Arizona State University (Social Choice Theory/Microeconomic
Theory)
Received on Wed Feb 13 2008 - 13:09:46 EST