Jeff Jenkins
@jaj7d
Provost Professor of Public Policy, Political Science, and Law @USC. Director @PIPECollab. Editor: @JPIPE_journal @JHPE_journal @BlogBroadstreet. #FirstGen
ID: 1180479770
https://sites.usc.edu/jajenkins/ 14-02-2013 22:26:28
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My PIPE Collaborative is entering its 8th year! For more on its history and past events, see here: priceschool.usc.edu/pipe/
Updated program for the First Annual Historical Political Economy Conference at USC, October 19-20. Co-hosted by Dr. Allison Spencer Hartnett and myself with the help of the great USC CIS staff. Discussants & coauthors added. Still looking for discussants for grad panels. dropbox.com/scl/fi/pny6u5j…
Coming soon: @JHPE 5(1): Special Issue on the Political Economy of Housing. With articles by Ryan Hübert 🏳️🌈, Michael Hankinson, @maxwellBPalmer, Martin Vinæs Larsen, Clayton Nall, @davidfoster0, Sofia Borushkina, Chris Elmendorf, Stan Oklobdzija, B Pablo Montagnes, Aleksei Kiselev, Niels Nyholt, among others.
This special issue of JPIPE on The PE of Housing was based on an earlier conference co-hosted by PIPE Collaborative and USC Lusk Center at USC Price School. Congrats to Jeff Jenkins and Jorge De la Roca for the great job.
Looking forward to a great set of PIPE Collaborative events this Fall!
Now out: JPIPE 5(1): special issue on The PE of Housing. Articles by Ryan Hübert 🏳️🌈, Michael Hankinson, @maxwellBPalmer, Martin Vinæs Larsen, Clayton Nall, @davidfoster0, Sofia Borushkina, Chris Elmendorf, Stan Oklobdzija, B Pablo Montagnes, Aleksei Kiselev, Niels Nyholt, and others. nowpublishers.com/PIP
New in JPIPE: A. Cuttner, Ryan Hübert 🏳️🌈 & B Pablo Montagnes find via a formal model -- contrary to common belief -- that public meetings dominated by NIMBY opponents can increase housing supply by fostering compromise projects. nowpublishers.com/article/Detail…
New in JPIPE: Martin Vinæs Larsen & Niels Nyholt use a vignette survey experiment to explore why Danish citizens oppose the construction of apartment buildings and find limited evidence that this opposition stems from concerns over congestion or out- group bias. nowpublishers.com/article/Detail…
New in JPIPE: Michael Hankinson, A. Magazinnik & Anna Weissman find that construction union reps are more likely to attend public meetings to advocate for favorable labor agreements when the expected profitability of new housing developments is high. nowpublishers.com/article/Detail…
New in JPIPE: Chris Elmendorf, Clayton Nall & Stan Oklobdzija find in a national survey of 5,000 urban and suburban voters that homeowners and renters alike support price controls, restrictions on Wall Street buyers, and subsidized affordable housing. nowpublishers.com/article/Detail…
New in JPIPE: Sofia Borushkina & Aleksei Kiselev find -- using Moscow as a case -- that allowing the construction of smaller and cheaper housing also leads to increased homogeneity. nowpublishers.com/article/Detail…
Great opening PIPE Collaborative Workshop for Fall 2024: Kareem Haggag presented work on inequality and racial backlash using the county-level placement of freedman’s bureaus as the treatment. Great discussion afterward led NicDuquette and J. Morgan Kousser.
Coming in 2025: Causal Inference and APD: New Frontiers. Chapters by Aditya Dasgupta, http://AliCirone.bsky.social, David Stasavage, Sean Gailmard, Anna Harvey, Dr. Dawn Teele, David Bateman, Gregory Wawro, Corrine McConnaughy, Joshua Clinton, Daniel Galvin, Sanford Gordon & others.