Public Outreach

At the interface between academic research and society, AMSE disseminates economic knowledge to non-academic audiences by:
- making the results of research accessible to everyone through its digital journal, Dialogues économiques, which publishes articles, videos and infographics,
- organizing outreach events (conferences, festivals, exhibitions),
- supporting researchers to contributing to the public debate (journalistic writing, press relations).
  • Dialogues économiques

The Schoolbag Revolution: Educating for Democracy

Are the foundations of democracy always laid in the midst of civil disobedience? Most democratic transitions in the last century have not, in fact, been the result of a peoples’ revolt. When it is in their own interests, authoritarian elites have been known to cede power without witnessing an insurrection. The economists Raouf Boucekkine, Paolo G. Piacquadio and Fabien Prieur interrogate the conditions necessary for peaceful transfer of power, by highlighting how education can lay fertile ground for the seeds of democracy.
Reference: Boucekkine R., Piacquadio P. G., Prieur F., 2019, "A Lipsetian theory of voluntary power handover," Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 168(C), 269-291
July 22nd 2020
  • Expertise

What is the impact of public research decision on innovation in France?

Researcher Raouf Boucekkine (AMU/AMSE) is coordinating a study for the French Ministry of Higher Education, Research and Innovation (article in French only)
July 16th 2020
  • Dialogues économiques

The Value of Coralligenous Habitats

What do we know about nature? Not a whole lot. According to estimates from the French National Museum of Natural History, we have identified between 1% and 10% of the species on Earth. Marine ecosystems have been greatly damaged from being exploited for our wants and needs, though we still know very little about them and the role they play. Whether it is for biology or economics, we should be diving deep into how these habitats are important on both a large and small scale. This is what Laure Thierry de Ville d’Avray, Dominique Ami, Anne Chenuil, Romain David, and Jean-Pierre Féral have demonstrated by studying a little-known Mediterranean habitat known as ‘coralligene.’
Reference: Thierry de Ville d’Avray L., Ami D., Chenuil A., David R., Féral J-P., 2019, « Application of the ecosystem service concept at a small scale : The case of coralligenous habitats in the North-western Mediterranean Sea », Marine Pollution Bulletin, 138, 160
July 08th 2020
  • Expertise

Policy Brief : "Vulnerables" to Covid-19

Aix-Marseille School of Economics contributed to the report published by the OFCE and Collège des Economistes de la Santé. Article only in French
June 30th 2020
  • Dialogues économiques

Overfishing: How Can It Be Regulated?

In order to maintain marine biodiversity, it is better to take the plunge and adopt fishing regulations than do nothing at all. However, the biological relationship between species must be considered to prevent things from going down the drain. Economists Nicolas Quérou and Agnes Tomini demonstrate this argument by studying the effects of fishing regulations in suboptimal situations.
Reference: Quérou N., Tomini A., 2018, « Marine ecosystem considerations and second-best management », Environmental & Resource Economics, 70 (2), 381-401
June 24th 2020
  • Expertise

Covid in Developing Economies

In the new CEPR eBook, Berman and co-authors analyse the potential impacts of the spread of COVID-19 and the restriction policies on conflict incidence worldwide.
June 23rd 2020
  • Dialogues économiques

Can the Central Bank still play the hero in the face of current and future debt?

How will we face the economic crisis that is awaiting us? History can give some insight. Since the financial crisis of 2008, industrialised states have been required to rely on the 'superpowers' of the Central Banks to buy back part of their debt, thereby avoiding the phenomenon of debt strangulation. Such practices have raised fears of a return to inflation, and of a threat to the independence of the monetary authorities. However, in the current context such practices can be beneficial, according to economists Gilles Dufrénot, Fredj Jawadi and Guillaume A. Khayat.
Reference: Dufrénot G., Jawadi F., Khayat G.A., 2018, "A model of fiscal dominance under the “Reinhart Conjecture”," Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 93(C), 332-345
June 10th 2020
  • Expertise

How did the general practitioners operate during the confinement linked to Covid-19?

Bruno Ventelou (CNRS/AMSE) health economist, co-author of a report for the French Directorate for Research, Studies, Assessment, and Statistics (only in French).
June 05th 2020
  • Dialogues économiques

What strategy should be employed to deal with COVID?

Are the containment measures effective? Should the population have been tested? Burning questions like this are igniting current public debate. Researchers Raouf Boucekkine (AMSE), Josselin Thuilliez (CNRS / PSE) and Jérôme Adda (Bocconi, Milan) have developed the “ECOVID-19” project, to respond to and assess the effectiveness of French public policy in the face of the current crisis.
Reference: Boucekkine R., Laffargue J-P., 2010, "On the distributional consequences of epidemics," Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Elsevier, 34(2), 231-245 (inter alia)
May 27th 2020
  • Dialogues économiques

Immigrants and Citizens: Equal in Health?

Even if immigrants arriving in Europe are in better health than native-born citizens, residing in their host country affects them much more negatively. According to Marwân-al-Qays Bousmah, Simon Combes, and Mohammad Abu-Zaineh, immigrants’ health deteriorates with the length of residence in the host country. Does discrimination go beyond the realm of social status to even impact health?
Reference: Bousmah M.-a.-Q., Combes J.-B.S., Abu-Zaineh M, 2019, “Health differentials between citizens and immigrants in Europe: A heterogeneous convergence”, Health Policy, 123(2), 235-243
May 13th 2020