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VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260526T155638Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240308T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240309T170000
SUMMARY:Economic Methodology: Models\, Measurement\, and Interventions
UID:20260531T052918Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:America/Los_Angeles
LOCATION:Palo Alto\, United States\, 94109
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Economic Methodology: Models\, Measurement\, and Interventions</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Primary contact:</strong></p>\n<p><strong></strong>Nadia Ruiz\, Stanford University (naruiz26@stanford.edu)</p>\n<p><strong>Organizing Committee:</strong></p>\n<p>Kobi Finestone\, Chapman University (finestone@chapman.edu)</p>\n<p>Benjamin Genta\, University of California\, Irvine (bgenta@uci.edu)</p>\n<p>Marcos Picchio\, (mpicchio@gmail.com)</p>\n<p><strong>Keynotes:</strong></p>\n<p>Malte Dold\, Pomona College</p>\n<p>Jennifer Jhun\, Duke University&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Armin Schulz\, University of Kansas</p>\n<p><strong>"Author-Meets-Critics" session</strong></p>\n<p>Author: Dan Hausman\, Rutgers University-New Brunswick</p>\n<p>Book: The Inexact and Separate Science of Economics 2nd edition.</p>\n<p>Critics:&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Alexander Rosenberg\, Duke University</p>\n<p>Nadia Ruiz\, Stanford University</p>\n<p>Margaret Schabas\, The University of British Columbia</p>\n<p><strong>Description:</strong></p>\n<p>Economic methodology encompasses the systematic analysis of the principles and techniques that economists employ to understand economic phenomena and craft policy interventions. Ranging from debates concerning the epistemic status of theoretical and empirical models to analyses of specific econometric techniques and experimental methods\, economic methodology attempts to understand economics as both an academic discipline and as a practical tool for social engineering.</p>\n<p>For this conference\, all topics in and related to economic methodology are welcome. The conference is also an opportunity to build a network of scholars interested in how economics works\, including philosophers\, economists\, historians\, and sociologists.</p>\n<p>Example topics include but are not limited to the following:</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Empirical economics and its relationship to economic theory.</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Experimental economics and its implications for economic methodology.</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Modeling\, data mining\, and testing.</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Economic imperialism and the future of the social sciences.</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Causal inference\, counterfactuals\, and policy analysis.</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Economists as scientists and as public intellectuals.</p>\n<p>Those interested in participating in the conference are invited to send an abstract of up to 750 words to <strong>naruiz26@stanford.edu</strong> by<u><em> December 4th\, 2023</em></u>. Please write &ldquo\;Economic Methodology Conference&rdquo\; in the subject line. The accepted speakers will be notified by <u><em>January 5th\, 2024.</em></u></p>\n<p><strong>Submission Guidelines:</strong></p>\n<p>I. Abstracts must be prepared for anonymous review&ndash\;&ndash\;authors are required to remove any information that could identify them.</p>\n<p>II. Two documents:</p>\n<p>a. One document should include the title of the paper\, the name and academic affiliation of the author\, contact email.</p>\n<p>b. One document should include the title of the paper and abstract.</p>\n<p>c. PDF or Word.doc</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Nadia Ruiz;CN=Kobi Finestone;CN=Benjamin Genta:
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