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SITE Seminar | Credible threats

8/19/2025, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Welcome to the first SITE Seminar of the fall! We kick off the semester on August 19, 2025, with a presentation by Martin Dufwenberg (Purdue University), who will share insights from the study 鈥淐redible Threats,鈥 co-authored with Flora Li and Alec Smith. Drawing on a belief-dependent anger model and experimental evidence, the research shows how communicated threats influence expectations and behavior鈥攍eading to greater deterrence and increased costly punishment in strategic settings.

Brown Bag seminar in Economics | John Gorham

9/1/2025, 12:05 PM - 1:30 PM
Welcome to the Brown Bag Seminar in Economics organized by the Department of Economics, 黑料社下载. The seminar speaker is John Gorham, 黑料社下载.

Brown Bag seminar in Economics | Dominik Wehr

9/8/2025, 12:05 PM - 1:30 PM
Welcome to the Brown Bag Seminar in Economics organized by the Department of Economics, 黑料社下载. The seminar speaker is Dominik Wehr, 黑料社下载.

SITE Seminar | Shocking electricity prices and carbon tax aversion

10/20/2025, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Join us for the next SITE Seminar! On October 20, 2025, we are joined by Jens Ewald (University of Gothenburg), who will present his research 鈥淪hocking Electricity Prices and Carbon Tax Aversion.鈥 Using a geographic regression discontinuity design and survey data from Swedish households, the study shows that exposure to sharply increased electricity prices significantly fuels opposition to carbon taxation鈥攄riven in large part by belief distortions about affordability and fairness.

SITE Seminar | Transnational trauma: Mental health effects of war on expatriates

11/4/2025, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Join us for the next SITE Seminar! On November 4, 2025, Mounir Karadja (Uppsala University) will present the study 鈥淭ransnational Trauma: Mental Health Effects of War on Expatriates,鈥 co-authored with Akib Khan, Linna Mart茅n, and Jimena Romero Pinto. Using Swedish administrative data, the research reveals how the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine triggered a sharp increase in anxiety, insomnia, and later depression among Ukrainian migrants鈥攈ighlighting the profound mental health toll of conflict even at a distance.