Call for proposals: IGC Ghana programme

The IGC’s Ghana programme is looking for research proposals from researchers working on the following thematic areas:

  1. Accelerated Growth with Macroeconomic Stability
  2. Agriculture
  3. Private Sector Development
  4. Human Capital
  5. Governance Accountability and the Political Economy
  6. Natural Resource Management and the Environment

Please note that the deadline for submission of project proposals is 16 August 2013.

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Welcome new members

We would like to welcome three new members of the InsTED network:

Professor Amrita Dhillon (University of Warwick) interested in the fields Economic Theory,Political Economy, Public Economics, and Development Economics.

Professor Roland Hodler (University of Lucerne) interested in the fields of Development Economics, Political Economics, Public Economics.

Professor Pierre-Guillaume Méon (Université Libre de Bruxelles) interested in the fields of political economy of monetary policy, and the impact of political institutions on economic performance.

Vacancy Announcement

INTERNATIONAL RECRUITMENT Accra, Ghana

RESEARCH FELLOW (P-3/P-4)

United Nations University-World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER)

Starting Date: As soon as possible.

Closing Date:  31 July 2013

UNU-WIDER is looking for an outstanding individual with strong commitment and potential to support the research and training programme of the Institute. For more information on UNU-WIDER and its work programme, please visit www.wider.unu.edu.

Link to UNU-WIDER

 

Vacancy Announcement

LOCAL RECRUITMENT Helsinki, Finland

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE (Personnel Service Agreement – PSA) (2 Positions)

United Nations University-World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER)

Starting Date: As soon as possible.

Closing Date:  31 July 2013

UNU-WIDER is looking for two (2) outstanding individuals with strong commitment and potential to support the research and training programme of the Institute. For more information on UNU-WIDER and its work programme, please visit www.wider.unu.edu.

Link to UNU-WIDER

Renewable Resources

Greater use of renewable energy is considered a key component to fight climate change and is now a policy priority for the governments of developed countries in particular.  The new agenda on renewable energy is also of interest to developing countries since they are more likely to experience the adverse consequences of climate change.

Bryce, R. (2010) Power Hungry: The Myth of “Green” Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future. New York: Public Affairs.

Cruz, Juan M. and, M. Scott Taylor (2012); “Back to the Future of Green Powered EconomiesNBER Working Paper No. 18236.

Dasgupta, Partha and Geoffrey Heal (1973); “The optimal depletion of exhaustible resources“, Review of Economic Studies, Special Issue on the Economics of Exhaustible Resources, 1973: 3-28. [Earlier version]

Droege, P., ed. (2009); 100% Renewable: Energy Autonomy in Action. London: Earthscan

Heal, Geoffrey (2010); “Reflections: The Economics of Renewable Energy in the United StatesReview of Environmental Economics and Policy, Oxford University Press for Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, vol. 4(1): 139-154. [Earlier version]

Exploratory Grant

Centre for Economic Policy Research, GB and other funders

The Centre for Economic Policy Research and the Department for International Development, through their private enterprise development in low-income countries initiative, invite applications for their exploratory research grants. These enable researchers to explore new approaches to the study of firms in low-income countries and develop new or existing sources of data on these firms. Research may relate to private enterprises of all sizes and should produce results that will be useful for policy-making. Proposals should address the following themes:

•modelling market frictions in low-income countries using newly available data;

•understanding how constraints interact using micro-founded macro models;

•the dynamics of SMEs – informality and entrepreneurship;

•the role of export-oriented industries in driving growth.

The initiative in particular seeks proposals that address the following cross-cutting issues: fragile and conflict-affected states, gender, and climate, environment and social compliance.

Only individuals, or teams with an individual representative, may apply.

Grants are worth between £10,000 and £35,000 over 12 months.

Link to funder’s website

The Role of Government in East Asian Economic Development: Comparative Institutional Analysis

“The role of government in East Asian economic development has been a contentious issue. Two competing views have shaped enquiries into the source of the rapid growth of the high-performing Asian economies and attempts to derive a general lesson for other developing economies: the market-friendly view, according to which government intervenes little in the market, and the developmental state view, in which it governs the market…” [Publisher’s book website]

Book review by Terutomo Ozawa in The Journal of Asian Studies, 58 (2): 453-454, May 1999.

ESRC-DFID Joint fund for poverty alleviation research 2013

Research programme call 2013

The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the Department for International Development (DFID) are pleased to announce a call for three large and exciting Research Programmes of work under Phase 3 of the ESRC-DFID Joint Fund for Poverty Alleviation Research. Both funders are committed to commissioning world class research and ensuring the results are available for policy makers and development workers worldwide.

The aim is to provide funding for new research on critical but relatively under-researched themes. The Research Programmes will undertake work in three areas:

Disability, Inequality and Poverty

Funding is available for one Research Programme of work of up to £2 million under this stream. Researchers are invited to develop research programme proposals which will examine the specific barriers to inclusion facing disabled people in low income country settings. The key research question is “What are the specific barriers to inclusion facing disabled children and adults in accessing health, education, social protection and labour market services, and how can these barriers be overcome in sustainable and cost-effective ways?”

Poverty in Urban Spaces

Funding is available for one Research Programme of work of up to £2 million under this stream. Researchers are invited to develop research programme proposals which will examine how urban spaces are changing and what the emerging challenges for tackling urban poverty reduction are. This will include an understanding of towns and peri-urban areas, and work on new interventions that can tackle urban poverty at scale in low income countries.

Urbanisation and Risk in Africa

Funding is available for one Research Programme of work up to £3.3 million to address evidence gaps around urbanisation and risk in an African context. Researchers applying under this stream are invited to develop research programme proposals which will map and measure the different dimensions of risk in urban Africa and produce policy-relevant evidence that can inform efforts by national, regional and municipal/city governments, multilateral agencies, NGOs and humanitarian donors to build urban resilience and manage risk and uncertainty.

Deadline for applications: 16.00 UK time, 10 September 2013

Link to the funder’s webpage

Midwest International Economics Group

Fall Meeting October 11-13 2013

University of Michigan

Call for papers August, 2013

The   Midwest International Economics Group was founded by John Pomery and Raymond Riezman in 1981 to foster and encourage research in   International Trade. We hold conferences twice a year, in the fall and   spring, jointly with the Midwest Mathematical Economics and Theory   conference. There are usually about 50 papers presented and roughly 75   people in attendance at each meeting.

Link to the event site

Second Joint NBER/BREAD Conference on Economic Development

Cambridge, MA, 11-12 October 2013

The National Bureau for Economic Research (NBER) Development Economics Program and the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD) are pleased to announce the Second Joint NBER/BREAD Conference on Economic Development. The conference, hosted by the NBER, will be held in Cambridge, MA, on 11-12 October 2013. You are invited to submit your research for presentation at the conference. The deadline for submissions is midnight EST on 4 August 2013.

Link to the event page