
Contact Information
E-mail: vsmith2@gmu.edu
Mailing Address:
Department of Economics, MSN 3G4
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
Vernon L. Smith, Nobel Prize winner in Economics, 2002, is currently
Professor of Economics and Law at George Mason University, a research
scholar in the Interdisciplinary Center for Economic Science, and
a Fellow of the Mercatus Center all in Arlington, VA. He received
his bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering from Cal Tech,
and his Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard. He has authored or co-authored
over 200 articles and books on capital theory, finance, natural
resource economics and experimental economics.
He serves or has served on the board of editors of the American
Economic Review, The Cato Journal, Journal of Economic Behavior
and Organization, the Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, Science,
Economic Theory, Economic Design, Games and Economic Behavior,
and the Journal of Economic Methodology.
He is past president of the Public Choice Society, the Economic
Science Association, the Western Economic Association and the Association
for Private Enterprise Education. Previous faculty appointments
include the University of Arizona, Purdue, Brown University and
the University of Massachusetts. He has been a Ford Foundation
Fellow, Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral
Sciences and a Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Scholar at the California
Institute of Technology.
The Cambridge University Press published his Papers in Experimental
Economics in 1991, and they published a second collection of more
recent papers, Bargaining and Market Behavior, in 2000. He received
an honorary Doctor of Management degree from Purdue University,
and is a Fellow of the Econometric Society, the American Association
for the Advancement of Science, and the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences.
He is a distinguished fellow of the American Economic Association,
an Andersen Consulting Professor of the Year, the 1995 Adam Smith
award recipient conferred by the Association for Private Enterprise
Education. He was elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences
in 1995, and received CalTech's distinguished alumni award in 1996.
He has served as a consultant on the privatization of electric
power in Australia and New Zealand and participated in numerous
private and public discussions of energy deregulation in the United
States. In 1997 he served as a Blue Ribbon Panel Member, National
Electric Reliability Council.
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