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Mines ParisTech

Margaret Kyle

Margaret Kyle (MINES ParisTech and CEPR) currently holds the Chair in Intellectual Property and Markets for Technology at MINES ParisTech. Her research concerns innovation, productivity and competition. She has a number of papers examining R&D productivity in the pharmaceutical industry, specifically the role of geographic and academic spillovers; the firm-specific and policy determinants of the diffusion of new products; generic competition; and the use of markets for technology. Recent work

Magdalen College, University of Oxford

Jennifer L. Castle

Jennifer L. Castle is an Official Fellow in Economics at Magdalen College, Oxford, an Associate Member of Climate Econometrics, Nuffield College, Oxford, and a Fellow of the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School. She previously held a British Academy Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at Nuffield College, Oxford. Her research interests lie in the fields of model selection and forecasting, in which she has published widely.

Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford

François Lafond

François Lafond is a senior research officer at the Mathematical Institute and deputy director of the Complexity Economics group at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford, and an associate member of Nuffield college. His main areas of research are in the economics of innovation and productivity, environmental economics, networks and complex systems, applied econometrics and forecasting.

University of Bristol

Ashley Lait

Ashley is the Research Editor at the Economics Observatory and leads on both our regional work and ECO magazine. She is also the Centre Manager at the Economics Network, an organisation that supports learning and teaching in higher education economics.

LSE

Camille Landais

Camille Landais is Professor of economics at the London School of Economics and Political Science, and Director of the Public Economics Programme of the Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). In addition to his academic position, he maintains affiliations with the Institut des politiques publiques, Institute for Fiscal Studies, STICERD, IZA Institute of Labor Economics, and the European Economic Association, on whose council he sits. His research focuses on public finance and labour economics

Henley Business School, University of Reading

Joe Lane

Joe Lane is a Lecturer in Strategy at Henley Business School. His published research broadly focuses on patents, innovation, and industrial clusters since the middle of the eighteenth century. His recent projects include applying a historical perspective to the development of industrial clusters and building a new database of British patents from 1750-1945 to better understand the patenting behaviours of individuals and firms over time.