Pipeline Conferences
The Annual Pipeline Conference, which coincides with the final week of the Pipeline Program’s Summer Program, is an event that brings minority economists and students (graduate and undergraduate) together for workshops that cover a number of areas in economics, as well as topics such as conducting research, success in graduate schools, the economics job market, and the experience of minorities in the field of economics. This conference also serves to strengthen networks between students at different stages in the pipeline, as well as to increase contacts between students, undergraduate programs, graduate programs, and faculty.
View programs for past Pipeline Conferences:
- Non-Cognitive Ability, College Learning, and Student Retention, Omar Swinton (Duke)
- Economies of Scale in the Household: Evidence and Implications from the American Past, Professor Trevon Logan (The Ohio State University)
- Black Elected Officials and Black-Owned Firms: Does Black Political Power Translate into Black Economic Power?, Vincent Mangum (Jackson State University)
- Measuring Social Interactions: Results from the Dutch Post Code Lottery, Peter Kuhn (University of California at Santa Barbara)
- Estimating the Long-Run User Cost Elasticity for a Small Open Economy: Evidence Using Data from South Africa, Brahima Coulibaly and Jonathan Millar Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
- Heterogeneous Effects of Limited English Proficient Students in Public Schools: A Look at Native Educational Outcomes in North Carolina, Robert Santillano (University of California at Berkeley)
