Speakers

On job market

Alexander Donges

University of Mannheim

I am Postdoctoral Researcher at the Department of Economics of the University of Mannheim, where I am cooperating with the Chair of Economic History (Prof. Dr. Jochen Streb). My research focuses on the economic history of Germany in the 19th and early 20th century, in particular on the historical determinants of regional disparities in innovation and on the evolution of German patent laws.

Luisa Dörr

ifo Institute for economic research

I am a doctoral student at Center for Public Finance and Political Economy at the ifo Institute in Munich. My research interests are public and urban economics.

Robin Döttling

Erasmus University Rotterdam

I am an assistant professor in finance at the Rotterdam School of Management at Erasmus University. My research interests are at the intersection between finance and macroeconomics, with a focus on topcis in financial intermediation, corporate finance, and monetary economics.

Orla Doyle

University College Dublin

Dr. Orla Doyle is an Associate Professor in the UCD School of Economics and a Research Fellow at the UCD Geary Institute for Public Policy at University College Dublin. The core focus of her research is the economics of human behaviour. She have developed, led, and consolidated a large research programme dedicated to evaluating the effectiveness of early childhood intervention programmes using experimental and quasi-experimental designs. She is currently the Director of the UCD Childhood and Human Development Research Centre.

Thomas Drechsel

University of Maryland

Thomas Drechsel is a macroeconomist and Assistant Professor at the Economics Department of the University of Maryland. His research focuses credit frictions in business cycles, various aspects of monetary policy, the role of commodities for emerging market economies, as well as real-time monitoring of macroeconomic activity. His work has been published in the Journal of Monetary Economics, the Journal of Finance, the Journal of International Economics and the Review of Economics and Statistics. Thomas is a German national and holds a PhD from the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Luca Flora Drucker

Central European University

I am a 4th year PhD student at Central European University, Budapest. My research interests lie in behavioral and education economics, with special focus on time-inconsistent behavior, social preferences, and inequalities.

Christian Düben

Hamburg University

After obtaining a master's degree in International Economics and Public Policy from the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz I joined the Chair of Macroeconomics at Hamburg University in September 2017. Since then I have been working in close cooperation with my supervisor and coauthor Melanie Krause. My dissertation evolves around research in development economics, urban economics, regional economics, economic geography, economic history and related fields.

Corinne Dubois

University of Fribourg

I am a postdoctoral researcher in the economics department of the University of Fribourg. Before that, I completed my PhD in 2018 at the Swiss Federal Institute of technology in Lausanne (EPFL). My research is on macroeconomic models that include banking and financial regulation. I study financial policies and their implications for the macroeconomy using theoretical tools, such as DSGE models, as well as empirical analysis.

Emma Duchini

University of Warwick

I am a labor economist, specialized in the areas of skills acquisition and gender differences in the labor market. I was born in Florence, where the exposure to the ingenuity of Renaissance artists motivated me to discover the world through the lens of an economist. Since then, I completed my PhD at Pompeu Fabra and I am now a Research Fellow at the University of Warwick with Professor V. Lavy. To answer my research questions, I chase unique settings and unexplored data across different countries.

Eugenie Dugoua

LSE

Eugenie is an environmental economist primarily interested in understanding how science, innovation, and technological change can help make economic development sustainable for the environment. Eugenie is an Assistant Professor in Environmental Economics at the London School of Economics, in the Department of Geography and Environment, and graduated with a Ph.D. from Columbia University in 2018.