Erik Dietzenbacher and Jan Oosterhaven receive Jiri Skolka Medal
At the 27th conference of the International Input-Output Association (IIOA) held in Glasgow from 1-5 July 2019, 400 participants saw Erik Dietzenbacher and Jan Oosterhaven receive the Jiri Skolka Medal. Jiri Skolka was one of the founding members of the IIOA and its first secretary. This medal honors officials of the IIOA who have served the association with exceptional quality over a long period of time. The medal has been awarded twice before.
Both Erik Dietzenbacher, Professor in Interindustry Economics, and Jan Oosterhaven, Professor of Spatial Economics and, served the Council of the IIOA for more than 16 years. They both have been the editor-in-chief of Economic Systems Research and President of the IIOA. Jan Oosterhaven was editor in the period 1994-1998 and president in 2007-2009, Erik Dietzenbacher was editor in the period 1999-2008 and president in 2013-2018. For their scientific contributions, they became a Fellow of the IIOA at an earlier stage.
________________________________________________
> More news from the Faculty of Economics and Business
> FEB experts in the media
Last modified: | 29 February 2024 10.02 a.m. |
More news
-
08 May 2024
Juliette de Wit, Femke Cnossen and Maite Laméris receive YAG grant
Juliette de Wit, Femke Cnossen and Maite Laméris have received a YAG Grant of € 6,000 for an interdisciplinary project on the long-lasting socio-economic consequences of the ‘Arbeitseinsatz’ in the Netherlands. The grant enables them to explore...
-
02 May 2024
Johan Remkes te gast in podcast Leiderschap in Onzekere Tijden Live
Oud-minister en oud-informateur Johan Remkes is op 15 mei te gast in de Podcast Leiderschap In Onzekere Tijden. In de liveopname van de podcastaflevering gaat hij met FEB-hoogleraren Janka Stoker en Harry Garretsen in gesprek over de huidige...
-
29 April 2024
The Maddison Project: New 2023 Update Illuminates Origins of Modern Economic Growth
In a new update of the renowned Maddison Project Database, economic historians shed new light on the genesis of modern economic growth.