Advancing Research on Iran’s Economy
  Search
Advanced Search

About Us | Economists | Papers | Data | Scholarship | Conferences | Calendar | Links
About Us
 
 
 
 
   
Advisory Board
 
Gary S. Becker, Chairman of the Advisory Board
   

Prof. Gary S. Becker, who won the Nobel Memorial Prize for Economic Science in 1992, is the Rose-Marie and Jack R. Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and University Professor of Economics and Sociology at the University of Chicago.

Becker is recognized for his expertise in human capital, economics of the family, and economic analysis of crime, discrimination, and population. His current research focuses on habits and addictions, formation of preferences, human capital, and population growth.

Becker is a featured monthly columnist for BusinessWeek magazine and served as an economic policy adviser for the Dole Presidential Campaign in 1996. He received the National Medal of Science in 2000 for his work in social policy. He is the 2004 recipient of the Jacob Mincer Prize for lifetime achievement in the field of labor economics and is one of the initial fellows of the Society of Labor Economists.

Becker's most recent publications include (with Guity Nashat) The Economics of Life and Accounting for Tastes. He is the author of numerous books, including the seminal work Human Capital, which was awarded the prestigious W.S.Woytinskty Award in 1964. Other books by Becker include A Treatise on the Family and The Economic Approach to Human Behavior.

He holds honorary degrees from a dozen universities, including Hebrew University in Jerusalem (doctor philosophae honoris causa), Knox College, Illinois (doctor of laws), Princeton University (doctor of humane letters), Columbia University (doctor of humane letters), and the University of Illinois at Chicago (doctor of arts).

Becker was a professor at the University of Chicago from 1954 to 1957 and at Columbia University from 1957 to 1968. In 1968–1969 he was a Ford Foundation visiting professor of economics at the University of Chicago before joining the Department of Economics there in 1970. Becker received an A.B. (summa cum laude) from Princeton University in 1951, an A.M. from the University of Chicago in 1952, and a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1955.


 
Djavad Salehi Isfahani
   
Djavad Salehi-Isfahani holds a BSc from University of London (Queen Mary College 1971) and Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University (1977). He is currently Professor of Economics at Virginia Tech. He was Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Pennsylvania (1977-84) and visiting faculty at the University of Oxford (1991-92). He is a Research Fellow of the Economic Research Forum, a network of Middle East economists based in Cairo, and served on its Board of Trustees during 2001-2006. His research has been in population economics, energy economics, and the economics of the Middle East. The focus of his current research is in human resources and the economics of the family in Iran. He has coauthored, with Jacques Cremer, the World Oil Market, 1991, and edited Labor and Human Capital in the Middle East, 2001. His articles have appeared in Economic Journal, Journal of Development Economics, and Economic Development and Cultural Change, among others.