Draft:Warwick Economics Summit
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- Comment: Reads somewhat like a promo, with a lot of big claims unreferenced. The table could probably be removed entirely, as it seems difficult to verify with reliable sources. Utopes (talk / cont) 01:19, 23 January 2024 (UTC)
The Warwick Economics Summit (WES) is an annual student-run conference based at the University of Warwick. The summit was first held in 2002 and has taken place every year since, hosting speakers and panels around economics, international relations, and politics. It claims to be the largest student-run summit in Europe.[1].
The summit has hosted 19 Nobel Laureates and 4 Nobel Peace Prize winners including Edmund Phelps, Shirin Ebadi, and Lars Peter Hansen. The speakers and panelisits who have attended WES include members of royal families, former heads of state, and leaders of international organisations.
The 2024 edition of the summit is scheduled to take place from the 2nd to the 4th of Feburary.
History[edit]
The first edition of the summit was held in January 2002 titled No longer inevitable? The Future of the World Economy after September 11th. It was the first ever inter-university undergraduate economics event in the United Kingdom [2].
In 2016 the former Prime Minister of Italy, Enrico Letta, praised the summit for being "modern and creative" whilst speaking about how he believed it is important for the United Kingdom to stay in the European Union [3].
After speaking at the 2018 edition of the summit, Yemeni Nobel Peace Prize winner Tawakkol Karman was suspended from the Al-Islah political party in Yemen. In her speech at WES she commented on what she saw as "reckless adventurism" by the Saudi-led coalition when they intervened in 2015, after Iran-aligned Houthi forces drove the President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi into exile [4].
At the 2023 edition of WES, a group of students from Student Action Warwick occupied the venue with a banner reading "Abolish The Economy", demanding the cancellation of the event [5]
Title | Year |
---|---|
No longer inevitable? The Future of the World Economy after September 11th | 2002 |
Globalisation and Development | 2003 |
Money for Nothing: The Dire Straits of the Modern Economy | 2004 |
The First Nobel Laureate | 2005 |
The Summit Expands Nationally | 2006 |
Challenging Paradigms | 2007 |
World Class | 2008 |
Policy Makers and Central Bankers | 2009 |
The Chancellor Speaks | 2010 |
The Rogue Trader | 2011 |
Bringing Economics to Life | 2012 |
Not Just a Concept | 2013 |
Policy Makers and Nobel Laureates | 2014 |
Rethink Policy, Finance, Sustainability, and GLobalisation | 2015 |
Growing Concerns over Europe, Development, and Growth | 2016 |
Economics and Political Power Entangled | 2017 |
Concerns for the Future: Human Rights, Sustainability, and New Forms of Economic Governance | 2018 |
Uncertainty: The Focus of the Conversation | 2019 |
Turn of the Decade | 2020 |
A New Hope: Leadership in the Darkest of Hours | 2021 |
An Ever-Changing Future | 2022 |
The King's Speech | 2023 |
References[edit]
- ^ Islam, Samin. "Finding my community in the Warwick Economics Summit". Our Warwick. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
- ^ "Our History". Warwick Economics Summit. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
- ^ "Warwick's international Economics Summit, led entirely by students, praised by former Italian PM Enrico Letta for being 'modern and creative'". The Independent. 10 February 2016. Retrieved 15 December 2023.
- ^ El Yaakoubi, Aziz (5 February 2018). "Yemen Islamist party suspends membership of Nobel laureate Karman". Reuters. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
- ^ Kowhai, Phoebe (February 2023). "Warwick students are occupying The Oculus in protest of the Warwick Economics Summit". The Warwick Tab. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
Sources[edit]
- "Warwick Economics Summit". Warwick Economics Summit. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
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