Professor Sanjeev Goyal FBA

Economics. Networks: the formation of networks, social structure and human behaviour, networks and markets. Politics and Public Economics. Conflict.
Fellow type
UK Fellow
Year elected
2015
Subjects
Economics

Summary

Sanjeev Goyal is Professor of Economics at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge. He is a pioneer and leading international scholar in the study of networks. His early research in the 1990's laid the foundations of an economic approach to the study of networks by providing a framework for the study of the effects of social structure on human behaviour and by providing a model of how the costs and benefits of linking shape the formation of networks. In subsequent work, he has explored applications of these ideas in the context of industrial organisation, economic development, international trade, finance, the diffusion of innovations, cybersecurity and conflict. In 2007, Princeton University Press published his book Connections: an introduction to the economics of networks. Sanjeev Goyal was the founding Director of the Cambridge-INET Institute.

Current post

Professor of Economics, University of Cambridge; Fellow, Christ's College, Cambridge

Publications

Learning From Neighbors Review of Economic Studies 1998

A Non-Cooperative Model of Network Formation Econometrica 2000

Networks of Collaboration in Oligopoly Games and Economic Behavior 2003

Network Games Review of Economic Studies 2010

The Law of the Few American Economic Review 2010

Attack, Defense and Contagion in Networks Review of Economic Studies 2014

Other Fellows of the British Academy

Professor Oriana Bandiera FBA

Applied microeconomics: incentives in organisations, labour markets and economic development

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Professor Janet Currie FBA

Economics of investing in children; socioeconomic differences in health and access to care, environmental threats, mental health, short and longer-run impacts of conditions in pregnancy, early childhood and adolescence

Janet Currie FBA

Professor Jane Humphries FBA

Eighteenth & nineteenth century economic history: industrialization; wellbeing; labour markets; women's work and family lives; child labour; anthropometrics

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