微观Workshop:Predictive Enforcement

发布日期:2023-10-26 12:00    来源:

时间:10月26日(周四)10:30 a.m.-12:00

地点:北京大学经济学院302

主讲人:Yeon-Koo Che (哥伦比亚大学Kelvin J. Lancaster经济理论教授)

主持老师:吴泽南,石凡奇(经院);胡岠(国发院)

参与老师:胡涛,吴泽南,石凡奇(经院);汪浩,胡岠,邢亦青(国发院);翁翕,刘烁(光华)

题目: Predictive Enforcement

摘要:We study law enforcement guided by data-informed predictions of “hot spots” for likely criminal offenses. Such predictive enforcement could lead to data being collected disproportionately from neighborhoods targeted for enforcement by the prediction. Predictive enforcement that fails to account for this endogenous “datafication” may lead to the over-policing of traditionally high-crime neighborhoods and performs poorly, in particular, in some cases as poorly as if no data were used. Endogenizing the incentives for criminal offenses identifies new benefits in deterrence for an informationally efficient of use data.

主讲人介绍:Yeon-Koo Che is Kelvin J. Lancaster Professor of Economic Theory at Columbia University. His early work contributes to the theory of mechanism and auction design: scoring-rule auctions, auctions with budget constraints, collusion-proof mechanism design, research contest, the incomplete contract paradigm for organization theory, and the matching theory in the context of college and school choice. His current research projects explore the implications of data-driven economic decision-making and resource allocation for welfare and distributional consequences. He is a Fellow of the Econometric Society (elected 2009), a Fellow of Economic Theory (elected 2014) for the Society of Advancement of Economic Theory, and a Fellow of Game Theory (elected 2023). He is a member of the Council of Game Theory Society (elected 2017) and of the Asian Regional Council of Econometric Society (elected 2016). He was the inaugural recipient in 2008 of the Cho Rakkyo Prize and the KAEA-MK Prize in 2009.  He has received nine National Science Foundation grants spanning over 20 years. He received a Ph.D. in Economics at the Stanford University. He was a Professor at the University of Wisconsin before joining Columbia University as a Professor of Economics in 2005.

 


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