Event overview
This is the third seminar in the ESRC Seminar Series, Spaces of Evidence.
Economics and economists have a long history of providing a scientific basis or justification for public policy decisions. Concepts derived from welfare economics, such as ‘market failure’, have provided a language through which politicians and government officials can understand where and why the state might (and might not) intervene in market processes. The efficiency of potential regulation can be tested through the use of models, based on neo-classical assumptions.
However, events such as the financial crisis have thrown a renewed scepticism upon the capacity of orthodox economic theories to adequately model situations. At the same time, a new empiricism has emerged, which makes a bold appeal to data and field trials, which are purportedly less cluttered by normative assumptions about causality and probability. ‘Big Data’ and randomised controlled trials are at the forefront of new efforts to probe economic activity, in search of policies which ‘work’. The distinction between ‘model’ and ‘reality’ is abandoned, and the economy becomes treated as a zone of experimentation and data-mining, such that behavioural patterns can be discerned.
The seminar will explore the implications of new directions in economic evidence, and ask what they mean for the authority of public policy, how they reconfigure expertise, and what types of epistemological and political assumptions they conceal. The confirmed speakers are:
- Prof Angus Deaton – Princeton University (Keynote lecture).
- Dr Suzy Moat – University of Warwick
- Dr Max Nathan - London School of Economics
- Dr Vera Ehrenstein – Goldsmiths, University of London
- Dr Martin Giraudeau – London School of Economics
- Dr Zsuzsanna Vargha – University of Leicester
- Dr Tiago Mata – University College London
The final programme will be circulated soon.
For further information or to reserve a place, please write to
Daniela Boraschi, programme coordinator, at evidence@essex.ac.uk
Dates & times
Date | Time | Add to calendar |
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26 Sep 2014 | 10:00am - 6:00pm |
Accessibility
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