Irish Postgraduate and Early Career Economics (IPECE) Workshop 2021 – Call for Papers

This year’s Irish Postgraduate and Early Career Economics (IPECE) Workshop will be hosted by the Economic and Social Research Institute Dublin and the Department of Economics, Trinity College Dublin on the 26th November 2021. We now invite PhD students and early career economists to submit their extended abstracts or research papers for consideration for the IPECE Workshop 2021. The workshop will be held online and there is no registration fee for this event.

The event is aimed at PhD students, postdoctoral and early career researchers. The meeting will provide an excellent opportunity to engage with research results and work-in-progress in a welcoming and constructive environment. We encourage those working on economics research, based on the island of Ireland, to attend.

The workshop will also feature talks on the placement of PhD graduates in Ireland and internationally, in academia and in policy institutions.

Please submit your extended abstracts or full research papers as a pdf file by 5th October 2021, to ipece2021@gmail.com. Please include JEL codes and a short CV in your submission.

Important dates

Submission deadline: 5th October 2021

Decisions and invitations to the workshop: 22nd October 2021

Registration deadline: 5th November 2021

Final program: 15th November

Workshop: 26th November

We are grateful for the support of the Irish Economic Association.

Local organising committee: Dora Tuda, Míde Griffin, Andre Sanchez Pacheco, Seamus O’Malley

By John Cullinan

John Cullinan is an Associate Professor in Economics at NUI Galway. He is an applied economist with research interests in health, disability and higher education.

One reply on “Irish Postgraduate and Early Career Economics (IPECE) Workshop 2021 – Call for Papers”

Well, we have the most centralised and malfunctioning system of politics and governance, the most dysfunctional economic system (both public and private) – that is driven almost completely by the sustained capture of ecnomic rents – and the least effective governance of capitalism in the EU, so I’m sure these post-grads and early career economists will find no shortage of material to get their teeth in to. Oh wait, that could be career-threatening – or even, career-ending.

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