Social Choice and Welfare Prize
The Social Choice and Welfare Prize is given by the Society for Social Choice and Welfare every two years to one or two young scholars, under the age of 40, in the areas of social choice theory and welfare economics. Winners are invited to give a lecture at the Meeting of the Society for Social Choice and Welfare, and are awarded the Social Choice and Welfare Medal.[1]
Laureates
- Matthew O. Jackson (2002)
- Francois Maniquet (2004)
- John Duggan (2006)
- Tayfun Sönmez (2008)
- Franz Dietrich and Christian List (2010)
- Lars Ehlers and Adam Meirowitz[2] (2012)
- Vincent Conitzer[3] and Tim Roughgarden (2014)
- Fuhito Kojima and Parag Pathak (2016)
- Gregory Egorov and Debasis Mishra (2018)
- Pietro Ortoleva and Ariel Procaccia[4] (2020)
gollark: Legal action was maybe also bad.
gollark: I do think the DALL-E Mini name was kind of bad.
gollark: I could automatically do business with an associate though. Probably not fast enough to trademark that much, but it should be possible to do short word sequences.
gollark: Can anyone stop me from trademarking all possible byte sequences (up to some length) preemptively?
gollark: That's probably true. I wasn't going to use C++ either way.
See also
References
- "Prize | Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines". www.unicaen.fr.
- "Adam Meirowitz Awarded 2012 Social Choice and Welfare Prize". Center for the Study of Democratic Politics (CSDP).
- "Vincent Conitzer Receives Social Choice and Welfare Prize". Duke Economics Department.
- "Procaccia Wins Social Choice and Welfare Prize". Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science. July 25, 2019.
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