Rachel E. Kranton

E1046133

Rachel E. Kranton is an economist known for her influential work on identity and its role in economic behavior and institutions.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Rachel E. Kranton canonical 1

Statements (51)

Predicate Object
instanceOf book
economist
person
scholarly article
areaOfInfluence behavioral economics
institutional economics
author George A. Akerlof NERFINISHED
George A. Akerlof NERFINISHED
Rachel E. Kranton NERFINISHED
Rachel E. Kranton NERFINISHED
citizenship American
coAuthor George A. Akerlof NERFINISHED
countryOfCitizenship United States of America
degree PhD in economics
doctoralAdvisor George Akerlof NERFINISHED
educatedAt Princeton University
University of California, Berkeley
employer Duke University NERFINISHED
fieldOfWork development economics
economic theory
economics
identity economics
microeconomics
network economics
gender female
hasAcademicAffiliation Duke University NERFINISHED
University of Maryland (past) NERFINISHED
hasAcademicRank full professor
hasPublishedIn American Economic Review NERFINISHED
Econometrica NERFINISHED
Quarterly Journal of Economics NERFINISHED
Review of Economic Studies NERFINISHED
hasRole researcher
university teacher
influenced research on identity and economics
knownFor integrating identity into economic models
research on identity in economics
work on institutions and identity
work on social norms and economic behavior
languageOfWorkOrName English
notableIdea formal modeling of identity in utility functions
identity-based preferences
notableStudent graduate students in economics at Duke University
notableWork Identity Economics: How Our Identities Shape Our Work, Wages, and Well-Being NERFINISHED
Identity and the Economics of Organizations NERFINISHED
occupation professor of economics
researchInterest development
education and identity
institutions
social networks
workInstitution Duke University Department of Economics NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

George A. Akerlof coAuthor Rachel E. Kranton