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Professor Kenneth J. Arrow, Nobel Laureate
Kenneth J. Arrow is Professor Emeritus of Economics and of Management Science and Engineering at Stanford University, and Senior Fellow of the Stanford Institute for Policy Research and of the Center for Health Policy. He has taught at Stanford University, Harvard University, and the University of Chicago, and has been a Visiting Professor or Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Churchill College (Cambridge), All Souls College (Oxford), and the University of Sienna. He has taught microeconomic theory, mathematical statistics, econometrics, income distribution, and the history of economic thought.
Dr. Arrow graduated from The City College (1940) and received an M. A. (Mathematics, 1941) and Ph. D. (Economics, 1951) from Columbia University. He is the author of 21 books and 265 papers in learned journals. His principal research fields were social choice, general equilibrium, economics of uncertainty and information, inventory theory, optimal growth with special reference to environmental constraints, and health economics.
He has received several honors, including the John Bates Clark Medal (American Economic Association), Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science, National Medal of Science, von Neumann Prize, and Medal of the University of Paris. He has also been President of several professional societies and a member or fellow of several honorary societies.
Click here to read a casual interview with Professor Kenneth Arrow.
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Professor Michael D. Intriligator
Michael D. Intriligator, Ph.D, is Professor of Economics at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He is also Professor of Political Science, Professor of Public Policy in the School of Public Policy and Social Research, and Co-Director of the Jacob Marschak Interdisciplinary Colloquium on Mathematics in the Behavioral Sciences, all at UCLA. Additionally, he is a Senior Fellow of the Milken Institute in Santa Monica. He has been a member of the UCLA faculty since 1963, teaching courses in economic theory, econometrics, mathematical economics, international relations, and health economics, and he has received several distinguished teaching awards.
Dr. Intriligator received his undergraduate S.B. degree in Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1959; his M.A. degree at Yale University in 1960, where he was the recipient of the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship; and his Ph.D. in Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1963. He is the author of more than 200 journal articles and other publications in his principal research fields including economic theory and mathematical economics, econometrics, health economics, reform of the Russian economy, and strategy and arms control.
Click here to read a casual interview with Professor Michael Intriligator. |