Daniele Caliari
QMULI am a PhD Student at QMUL. My research interests are Behavioural and Experimental economics with reference to Decision Theory and Stochastic Choice.
Alessandro Castagnetti
Warwick UniversityI am a PhD Candidate in Economics at the University of Warwick. In fall 2018 I visited the Center for Experimental Social Science (CESS) at New York University. My research interests are Behavioral and Experimental Economics. In particular, I work on two broad areas. First, I am interested in overconfidence and the role played by motivated beliefs. Second, I study the role of emotions in decision-making and strategic interactions.
Anand Chopra
University of British ColumbiaI am a PhD Candidate at the Vancouver School of Economics, University of British Columbia. My research interests are Household finance and International macroeconomics. I am especially interested in understanding household's consumption smoothing mechanisms (includes family labour supply and access to financial institutions) against income shocks, and effects of developed country's monetary policy spillovers on emerging markets.
Davide Cipullo
Uppsala UniversityI am a Ph.D. candidate at the Department of Economics, Uppsala University, and I will be on the academic job market in Fall 2020. I conduct research in empirical and theoretical political economics. I visited the Department of Economics at Harvard University during the academic year 2018-2019, invited by Prof. Oliver Hart. Before the Ph.D., I received a double degree M.Sc. in Economics at the universities of Siena and Uppsala.
Sarah Clifford
University of OxfordI am currently a Postdoctoral Prize Research Fellow at Nuffield College and the Department of Economics, University of Oxford. I am also a postdoctoral research fellow at the Centre for Business Taxation, Said Business School. My research primarily focuses on topics related to taxation of corporations and households.
Femke Cnossen
University of GroningenI am a PhD student at the University of Groningen, with a main focus on Labour Economics. My PhD thesis revolves around three core issues: tasks, skills and meaning at work. I am interested in what it is that people are exactly doing at work, how it relates to their capabilities, and when they feel they can thrive in their jobs. In my research, I like to combine survey data to administrative data, to find how workers' perceptions of their work help us explain their labour market careers.
Daniel Croner
University of ViennaI am currently employed as a postdoctoral researcher on a project about climate policy delegation. My research interests comprise all issues of environmental economics. In my work so far, I was specializing on Directed Technical Change, Input-Output Analysis, Environment and Trade and International Environmental Agreements. I graduated from the University of Regensburg with a Diploma in Mathematics in 2012. In 2017 I obtained my Doctoral Degree in economics from TU Vienna.