2018 North American Summer Meeting
Andrés Carvajal, Co-Chair NASMES 2018
Website: http://nasmes.dss.ucdavis.edu
Paper Submission: https://app.oxfordabstracts.com/stages/105/submission
The 2018 North American Meeting of the Econometric Society (NASMES 2018) will take place in Davis, CA, June 21 to 24, 2018. The Meeting is hosted by the Department of Economics at the University of California – Davis. Three named lectures will be given at the meeting: The Walras-Bowley Lecture, by Xavier Vives (University of Navarra); the Cowles Lecture, by Ellen McGrattan, (University of Minnesota and Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis); and the University of California Lecture, by Susan Athey (Stanford University).
Paper submissions begin today, November 15, 2017, with deadline February 15, 2018. Each person may submit only one paper and present only one paper. However, each person is allowed to be a co-author of multiple papers submitted to the conference. At least one author of each paper must be a member of the Econometric Society. Please visit https://www.econometricsociety.org/user/register to join or renew membership.
In addition to submitted papers and the three named lectures, there will be nine keynote, semi-plenary sessions.
The meeting organizers and program chairs are
A. Colin Cameron, University of California – Davis
Andrés Carvajal, University of California – Davis
Martine Quinzii, University of California – Davis
Important dates:
Submissions close: February 15, 2018
Decision notifications: March 31, 2018
Early registrations close: May 17, 2018
Registrations close: May 31, 2018
In Memoriam: Martine Quinzii
It is with a very heavy heart that we inform you that Martine Quinzii passed away on May 25th, in Perigueux, France. She was a fellow of The Econometric Society since 2000, and served as Associate Editor of Econometrica from 1991 to 2003.
Martine was a prolific researcher, an enthusiastic academic, a devoted teacher and an unconditional friend. Her contributions to the theory of general equilibrium and to its interactions with macroeconomic theory and finance are not just seminal: they are significant also for the creativity, rigor and elegance they display. Her work reached a standard that later economic theorists strive to achieve.
During her career, she taught mathematics and economics at Marseille-Luminy, Ecole Politechnique, Aix-Marseille, Paris II, Southern California and UC Davis, where she was Professor Emeritus since 2016. She had been Associate Editor at Annals of Finance, Economic Theory, Journal of Mathematical Economics, and Mathematical Social Sciences, and was a fellow also of The Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory.
Martine was Co-Chair of the forthcoming North American Summer Meeting of the Econometric Society. The Society’s Walras-Bowley Lecture at that conference, which she was expected to chair, will be delivered in her memory.
http://https://saet.uiowa.edu/