The
Emile
Grunberg
Lecture
Series
| The Twelveth Lecture - April 23, 1999:
Professor Robert W. Fogel
Department of Economics
University of Chicago
Nobel Prize in Economics, 1993
"The Fourth Great Awakening and the Future of Egalitarianism?"
Professor Fogel won a Nobel Prize for having renewed research in economic
history by applying economic theory and quantiative methods in order to explain
economic and institutional change. His foremost work concerns the role of the
railways in the economic development of the United States, the importance of
slavery as an institution and its economic role in the USA, and studies in
historical demography.
(Click a lecture for more information.)
| The First Lecture,
1988, Herbert A.
Simon (Nobel
1978) | The Second
Lecture, 1989,
William Cooper
(Von Neumann
Medal 1982) | The Third Lecture,
1990, Franco
Modigliani (Nobel
1985) | The Fourth
Lecture, 1991,
Richard Cyret |
| The Fifth Lecture,
1992, James Tobin
(Nobel 1981) | The Sixth Lecture,
1993, Robert Solow
(Nobel 1987) | The Seventh
Lecture, 1994,
Kenneth Arrow
(Nobel 1972) | The Eighth
Lecture, 1995,
Lawrence Klein
(Nobel 1980) |
| The Ninth Lecture,
1996, Harry M.
Markowitz (Nobel
1990) | The Tenth Lecture,
1997, Douglass C.
North (Nobel 1993) | The Eleventh
Lecture, 1998,
James A. Mirrlees
(Nobel 1996) | The Twelveth
Lecture, 1999,
Robert W. Fogel
(Nobel 1993) |
|