Seminars
Seminars
Monday Lunch Seminars Mario Pagliero (University of Torino and Collegio Carlo Alberto)
"The Demand for Adoption"
Seminars in Economics Andrea Ichino (University of Bologna)
"Don’t spread yourself too thin. The impact of task juggling on workers' productivity"
Monday Lunch Seminars Filippo Taddei (Collegio Carlo Alberto)
"On the Inefficiencies of Cheap Credit"
Seminars in Economics Guy Michaels (London School of Economics)
"Do Oil Windfalls Improve Living Standards? Evidence from Brazil"
Seminars in Politics and Society Grzegorz Ekiert (Harvard University)
"The weakness post-communist civil societies reassessed"
Seminars in Economics Bo Honoré (Princeton)
"Estimation of Cross Sectional and Panel Data Models with Two-sided Censoring or Truncation"
Monday Lunch Seminars Tetyana Dubovyk (CeRP)
"Saving Behaviour of Italian Elderly"
Seminars in Economics Arvind Krishnamurthy (Northwestern University, Kellogg)
"The Aggregate Demand for Treasury Debt"
Seminars in Economics Christopher Flinn (New York University)
"Household Choices and Child Development"
Seminars in Politics and Society John Stephens, Evelyne Huber (University of North Carolina)
"Politics, policy, poverty, and inequality in Latin America"
Seminars in Politics and Society Nadia Urbinati (Columbia University)
"Republicanism and democracy: An untold rivalry"
Seminars in Economics Guido Lorenzoni (MIT)
"A Rational Theory of Irrational Exuberance"
Seminars in Economics Veronica Guerrieri (University of Chicago, Booth)
"Adverse Selection in Competitive Search Equilibrium"
Seminars in Politics and Society Ferruccio Pastore (FIERI)
"Is Europe regressing on migrant rights? Comparative reflections centered on the Italian case"
Monday Lunch Seminars Aleksey Tetenov (Collegio Carlo Alberto)
"Detecting the Existence of Treatment Effects in Randomized Studies with Noncompliance"
Seminars in Economics Libertad González (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
"Immigration and Housing Booms: Evidence from Spain"
Seminars in Economics Joe Altonji (Yale)
"Modeling Earnings Dynamics"
Seminars in Economics David Miller (University of California, San Diego)
"A Theory of Disagreement in Repeated games with Renegotiation"