Siwan Anderson is a Professor at the Vancouver
School of Economics at the University of British Columbia in
Canada. Her research focuses on gender and local level political
institutions. She is currently associate editor of the Journal of
Development Economics, the Review of Economics and Statistics, and
the Journal of Globalization and Development. She is a fellow of
the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) and the Bureau
for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD). She is a
research associate of the Center for Effective Global Action (CEGA)
at Berkeley and of the Theoretical Research in Development
Economics (ThReD) consortium. Her research has been published in
the American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy,
Quarterly Journal of Economics, and the Review of Economic Studies,
among others.
Lori Beaman is an Associate Professor of Economics at Northwestern University. A development economist working on microeconomic issues, Lori's research interests are centered on two themes: social networks and gender. Her work has evaluated the impact of a political affirmative action program on gender bias in rural India; how social networks affect labour market opportunities among women in Malawi; and how to encourage African farmers to adopt profitable agricultural technologies, particularly women farmers. Her work has been published in Science, the American Economic Review, the Review of Economic Studies, and the Quarterly Journal of Economics among others. After serving as a Peace Corps volunteer in Mali for two years, she received her PhD in Economics in 2007 from Yale University.
Jean-Philippe Platteau is a Professor at the University of
Namur, Belgium. He is the author of several books, including Islam
Instrumentalized: Religion and Politics in Historical Perspective
(Cambridge University Press, 2017). He has published widely in both
development and general economics journals. Most of his work has
been concerned with the understanding of institutions in economic
development, and the processes of institutional change. The role of
informal institutions and the influence of non economic factors and
other frontier issues at the interface between economics and
sociology have been a central focus of his work. Examples are:
family structures, informal insurance and micro-insurance, customs
and social norms, religion, and collective action problems.
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