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发展政经worksho:The Rise of China and the Global Production of Scientific Knowledge
发布日期:2024-05-24 12:00 来源:
时间:2024年5月24日 周五 11:30-13:00
地点:承泽园249教室
主讲人:Hyejin Ku(University College London)
参与老师:(国发院)李力行、席天扬、徐化愚、于航、王轩、易君健、黄清扬;
(经院)刘冲、吴群锋、曹光宇
讲座报名链接:https://biaodan100.com/web/formview/664a8f26fc918f032a50dfb2
此外,本次讲座前还安排了office hour,时间为5月21日 周二 16:00-18:00,请感兴趣的老师点击以下链接报名。
Office hour报名链接:https://docs.qq.com/sheet/DWWRveUhwT2x4VnFQ?tab=BB08J2
题目:The Rise of China and the Global Production of Scientific Knowledge
摘要:We study China’s rapid rise as a new scientific superpower and its impact on the world’s top research universities over the period 1996-2016, asking what happens to science when a new dominant player enters the field. In a novel research design that can be applied to multiple scientific fields in a common framework, we expose different universities in each field to different degrees of the China shock, based on the topic composition of their initial publications together with the topic-specific growth of China’s research capacity over time. We find that net spillovers from China vary considerably across fields, e.g. significantly positive in chemistry but negative and statistically insignificant in mathematics. To explain the heterogeneous net effects, we explore competition, collaboration and complementarity as possible channels and assess their relative importance in different scientific fields.
个人简介:Hyejin Ku is Associate Professor of Economics at University College London and Deputy Director of the Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration (CReAM). She received her PhD in Economics from Cornell University, USA. She is affiliated with the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), the Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) and the ROCKWOOL Foundation Berlin Institute for the Economy and the Future of Work (RFBerlin). Her research interests are in labour economics and applied microeconomics. Her recent work has focused on the effects of incentive schemes and workplace policies on productivity, career progression and inequality, and on the economics of immigration. More recently, she has worked on issues related to knowledge creation and technology adoption in both historical and contemporary contexts.