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I am the leader of the CEPR’s Research and Policy Network on “Media Plurality”. I received the 2023 Best Young French Economist Award. French version. Une histoire du conflit politique. Élections et inégalités sociales en France, 1789-2022. Avec Thomas Piketty, Le Seuil, 2023. English translation: A History of Political Conflict.
Julia Cagé (* 17. Februar 1984 in Metz, Département Moselle) ist eine französische Wirtschaftswissenschaftlerin am Sciences Po Paris, die sich auf Entwicklungsökonomie sowie politische und historische Ökonomie spezialisiert hat. Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben. 2 Rettet die Medien. 3 Werke. 4 Einzelnachweise. Leben.
Bio/CV - Julia Cagé. Download my CV. CV en français. I am a Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at Sciences Po Paris, and a Research Fellow at the Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), where I also lead the Research and Policy Network on “Media Plurality”.
Julia CAGÉ is Full Professor of Economics since 2024 - she joined the Department in 2014 and was tenured in 2021. In 2018 she became the Co-director of LIEPP's "Evaluation of Democracy" research group. She is also a CEPR Research Fellow. Her research focuses on political economy, industrial organization and economic history.
Julia Cagé (born 17 February 1984) is a French economist specializing in development economics, political economy, and economic history . Early life. Julia Cagé has a twin sister, Agathe Cagé, who is a technocrat and an advisor to Najat Vallaud-Belkacem. [1] Cagé attended prep school in letters and social sciences at Lycée Thiers in Marseille.
Research - Julia Cagé. Publications in refereed journals. "Political Inequality." Annual Review of Economics, forthcoming. Abstract. Download. CEPR Discussion Paper #18336. “Firm Donations and Political Rhetoric: Evidence from a National Ban” with Caroline Le Pennec-Çaldichoury (HEC Montréal) and Elisa Mougin (Sciences Po Paris).
Julia Cagé is a Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at Sciences Po Paris, and a Research Fellow at the Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), where she also leads the Research and Policy Network on “Media Plurality”.