User:JayDSaunders/sandbox/John Kenneth Galbraith Forum and Award
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John Kenneth Galbraith Forum and Award
The John Kenneth Galbraith Forum and Award is awarded annually by the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association (AAEA). This prestigious honor goes to a distinguished professional for continuing Galbraith's tradition of outstanding research and major social contributions. The Galbraith Award winner is also a plenary speaker at the AAEA Annual Meeting.
John K. Galbraith
John Kenneth Galbraith was born October 15, 1908. He received his Ph.D. in agricultural economics from the University of California, Berkeley. After graduation, he taught at Berkeley and the University of California, Davis. Galbraith then moved to the East Coast and had a long and distinguished career teaching economics at Harvard and Princeton Universities. He has played an important public service and policy role. During World War II Galbraith administered price controls for the United States. He was an adviser to multiple U.S. Presidents and served as U.S. Ambassador to India under President John F. Kennedy. Galbraith also served as the editor of Fortune Magazine from 1943-1948, and a wrote several books including American Capitalism (1951) and The Affluent Society (1958). He holds the Medal of Freedom and the Order of Canada.
History of the Forum and Award
The Forum was created in 2003 as an honor to Galbraith. Agricultural and applied economists from around the world gathered at the 2003 AAEA annual meeting in Montreal, Canada, to witness the birth of the John Kenneth Galbraith Forum and Award. The Galbraith Fund was established within the AAEA Trust by private donors. The Galbraith Forum and Award Committee selects the recipient of the Award each year. The committee has six members appointed to a three-year rotating term, with two new members each year. Five Galbraith Award Honorees are Nobel Laureates.
Past recipients * indicates Nobel Laureate
2003 Gordon Rausser, University California, Berkeley
James Galbraith, University of Texas Derek Bok, Harvard University
2004 Jospeh E. Stiglitz*, University of Chicago 2005 Michael E. Porter, Harvard University 2006 Kenneth Arrow*, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy 2007 Sir Partha Dasgupta, St. John’s College, Cambridge 2008 Elinor Ostrom*, Indiana University 2009 Angus Deaton*, Princeton University 2010 John A. List, University of Chicago 2011 Martin Ravallion, World Bank 2012 Daron Acemoglu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2013 Martin Weitzman, Harvard University 2014 Jean Tirole*, Toulouse School of Economics 2015 Anne Case, Princeton University 2016 Alain de Janvry, University of California, Berkeley
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