Congress

Elisabete Martins

Thursday, 11 April 2013 19:56

Networks

The Virtual Center for Supernetworks

The Virtual Center for Supernetworks at the Isenberg School of Management, under the directorship of Anna Nagurney, the John F. Smith Memorial Professor, is an interdisciplinary center established to:

  • stimulate activities related to supernetworks
  • explore applications of supernetworks
  • bring together faculty, students, and those in industry and government for education and collaboration
  • expand the knowledge base of network research
  • disseminate information concerning networks and their roles in today's Information Age and Network Economy.

Mission: The mission of the Virtual Center for Supernetworks is to foster the study and application of supernetworks and to serve as a resource to academia, industry, and government on networks ranging from transportation, logistical, and telecommunication networks to economic, environmental, financial, and social networks.

The applications of Supernetworks include: transportation, logistics, critical infrastructure, telecommunications, electronic commerce, supply chain management, environment, economics, finance, and decision-making.

Funding for the Center has been provided by: The National Science Foundation The AT&T Foundation The John F. Smith Memorial Fund of the University of Massachusetts.

CHI Research, Inc.

CHI Research, Inc. announces the availability of its Regional Tech-Line Patent Profiles covering technology trends through 2001 for US metropolitan areas (available now), US states, and countries (both scheduled to be released during April). They provide technology indicators based on US patents granted in the last ten years to inventors residing in those regions.

Researchers can compare regions by technological strength and impact, and identify technology hot spots, areas where the technology base is growing fast or with a shrinking commitment to technology, technologies where regional companies are innovating quickly, and the contribution that science makes to technological development in a city, state, or country.

Indicators include number of patents, growth in patenting, technology distribution, patent impact (Current Impact Index [CII]), technological strength, speed of innovation (Technology Cycle Time [TCT]), importance to subsequent technology (cites received per patent), linkage to science, and science strength. 

CHI Research is an internationally recognized research consultancy specializing in the development and analysis of technology and science indicators. CHI's indicators are used by corporate and public clients throughout the world. For more information about Regional Tech-Line, custom data extractions, or CHI and its services and products contact: e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., phone: (856)546-0600, or fax: (856)546-9633. Address: CHI Research Inc., 10 White Horse Pike, Haddon Heights, NJ 08035

Interventions vs. Market Approaches

We are pleased to present the third issue of PLANNING & MARKETS, a wholly electronic, fully refereed journal published on the World Wide Web. Go to: http://www-pam.usc.edu/

PLANNING & MARKETS is devoted to the study of planned interventions in social and economic processes versus market approaches. Dramatic advances in communications technologies have speeded information exchange almost everywhere. Refereed research in the social sciences and related policy fields are no exception.

Planning & Markets is the first academic journal in its field to be edited, refereed, and published exclusively using the Internet and World Wide Web. 

Last years premier issue of PLANNING & MARKETS is archived and accessible at the same address.

Email subscriptions to PLANNING & MARKETS are free. Web visitors can subscribe directly from the PLANNING & MARKETS Web site. 

For more information, please contact one of the Co-editors: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.Jim MooreThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

RePEc Working Papers Database

RePEc stands for Research Papers in Economics, and is a vast collection of working papers, articles and software components contributed by over 80 archives. Among them are the NBER, the CEPR, all US Federal Reserve Banks, EconWPA, and many other academic and professional institutions. Currently, about 57000 working papers, 10000 articles and 300 software components are classified. Over 14000 items are available online in full text. 

This tremendous database is accessible for free through several services. Two of them are IDEAS and NEP. IDEAS allows users to browse through all paper descriptions by series or JEL classification, search by keywords and access the available full texts.

At NEP, you may subscribe to email reports with abstracts and download details of all new additions to RePEc. There are over 40 field-specific mailing lists to choose from. Click here for other services using subsets of the database are also available and are described.

You are invited to explore these free services. If your institution does not yet contribute to RePEc, we also invite you to participate. Click here for details. Contributions are also free. Journals are welcome to join, too.

The Web Book of Regional Science

Web Book of Regional Science is a peer-reviewed and edited on-line collection of learning materials developed for upper-division undergraduates and graduate students taking courses related to regional science. Contributions are typically shorter than a book but longer than a journal article. An on-line pop-up glossary allows the reader to see terms defined without leaving the text. Hot links allow readers to view related resources while studying The Web Book of Regional Science. A diverse set of contributions makes it easy for instructors to pick a subset of materials that best fits their students. Contributions fall into two major categories: policy/practice and theoretical/empirical. To propose a contribution, contact, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., director of the Regional Research InstituteWest Virginia University.

EconData.Net

EconData.Net is a Web site with links to over 125 on-line sources of regional socioeconomic data. Although the Web offers a substantial, and ever-increasing, amount of economic data on-line, it has been difficult to know what data are available and how to find them. To aid development practitioners and researchers in their search for on-line data, EconData.Net provides links to over 125 public, university, and private sources of regional socioeconomic data. Access to on-line data is provided to the various series profiled in the User's Guide as well as many others. Over the next few months, the site's listings will be further expanded and its format given a new look. EconData.Net is funded by the Economic Development Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce. Direct questions or comments to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Other Useful Data and Resource Links

GeoSource

Thursday, 11 April 2013 19:34

RSAI Founder's Medal

2024

J F Thisse

Jacques Thisse

       

2020GeoffreyHewings2020

Geoffrey Hewings

 

2016mfischer

 Manfred Fischer


2012

Arthur Getis

(deceased, 2022)

2008

Antoine Bailly

(deceased, 2021)

2004

Peter Nijkamp

 

2000

 David E. Boyce

 

1996

Jean H. P. Paelinck

 

1991

William Alonso

 (deceased, 1999)

1983

Martin J. Beckmann

(deceased, 2017)

1978

Walter Isard

(deceased, 2010)

rsai medalThe Regional Science Association was founded in 1954 to provide intellectual leadership in the study of social, economic, political and behavioural phenomena with a spatial dimension. Consequently, the Association brings together scholars from a large number of fields, including economics, geography, urban and regional planning, civil engineering, sociology, finance and political science. Members are found in academic institutions, in government, in consulting organizations and a variety of private firms. In 1990, the Association changed its organizational structure to better reflect the growth and development of the field; the Regional Science Association International now serves as an umbrella organization overseeing three major superregional organizations in North America, Europe and the Pacific.

The main objectives of the Association are the fostering of exchange of ideas and the promotion of studies focusing on the region, including the utilization of tools, methods and theoretical frameworks, specifically designed for regional analysis as well as concept, procedures and analytical techniques of the various social and other sciences. These objectives are supported through the acquaintance and discussion among its members and with scholars in related fields, by the encouragement of publication of scholarly studies and by performing services to aid the advancement of its members and the field of regional science. For more information contact the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Traditionally, the RSAI honoured its leading members through their election to the office of President. This practice changed in 1990, when the President became principally a leadership position in the Association. In 1978, the Association honoured its founder, Professor Walter Isard, by establishing the Founder's Medal. Today, this award remains the only honour conveyed by the Association as a whole, although its three supraregional organizations have established annual awards.

The Founder's Medal was established to recognize lifetime contributions to the field of Regional Science and to the Association. The criteria established for the award are as follows:

  • The recipient should be a senior scholar who has contributed in an important way to the field of Regional Science in a scholarly sense;
  • The recipient should have been active in the RSAI for a sustained period, but not necessarily active at the time of the award; also, the award is not given posthumously;
  • The recipient should be a person with whom many members can identify; his/her contributions could be a major work in one area or many works in several areas;
  • The contribution need not be limited to one type of contribution; it might be theory, method or policy, for example;
  • It is recognized that the native country and language of scholars affect the extent to which they are known by the membership, and an effort should be made to take this into account.

The recipients of the Founder's Medal:

  1. Walter Isard, Professor of Economics, Regional Science and Peace Science, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; in 1979, Professor Isard became Professor of Economics (Regional Science and Peace Science), Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA; awarded in 1978 at the North American Meetings, Chicago.
  2. Martin J. Beckmann, Professor of Economics, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA, and Professor of Applied Mathematics (Operations Research), Technical University, Munich, Germany; awarded in 1983 at the North American Meetings, Chicago.

  3. William Alonso, Saltonstall Professor of Population Policy, Center for Population Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA; awarded in 1991 at the North American Meetings, New Orleans (deceased, 1999).

  4. Jean H. P. Paelinck, Professor Emeritus of Economics, Rotterdam School of Economics, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; awarded in 1996 at the World Congress, Tokyo.

  5. David E. Boyce, Professor of Transportation and Regional Science, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA; awarded in 2000 at the World Congress, Lugano.

  6. Peter Nijkamp, Chair and Professor of Regional and Urban Economics and Economic Geography, Free University, Amsterdam, and President of the governing board of the Netherlands Research Council; awarded in 2004 at the World Congress, Port Elizabeth.

  7. Antoine Bailly, Born in 1944, Antoine Bailly is professor emeritus of economic geography at the University of Geneva, Switzerland. He is the president of the IGU Applied Geography Commission, of the Scientific Committee of the INRA PSDR (France) and of the Forum Sante Gesundheit (Switzerland). He was presented with the Founder's medal at ERSA conference Liverpool, August 2008. 

  8. Arthur Getis is a Distinguished Professor of Geography, Emeritus, at San Diego State University. He holds BS and MS degrees in Geography from The Pennsylvania State University and a Ph.D. in Geography from the University of Washington, and his areas of research include spatial statistics, pattern analysis, urban geography, disease and crime clustering, and geographic information sciences. He was presented with the Founder's medal at the 9th World Congress in Timisoara, Romania, May 2012.

  9. Manfred M. Fischer is Chair Professor of Economic Geography at the Vienna University of Economics and Business. He was co-founder of the prominent interdisciplinary journal Geographical Systems (Gordon & Breach) and is now editor-in-chief of its successor, the Journal of Geographical Systems (Springer), and is a member of the editorial boards of several other peer-reviewed journals. He also co-founded the Springer book series, Advances in Spatial Science, and served for eight years as Chair of the IGU Commission on Mathematical Models. He was presented with the Founder's medal at the 56th ERSA Congress in Vienna, Austria, August 2016.

  10. Geoffrey Hewings was the founding Director of REAL and served in this position until August 2016. He obtained a B.A. from the University of Birmingham (UK) and an M.A. and a Ph.D. from the University of Washington (Seattle). Prior to coming to Illinois in 1974, he was on the faculty of the University of Kent at Canterbury (UK) and the University of Toronto (Canada). He is also a recipient of the Fulbright and the Woodrow Wilson awards and, in 2003, he has also been nominated Fellow of the Regional Science Association International. He is also Fellow of the International Input-Output Association (since 2010) and the Western Regional Science Association (also since 2010). Geoffrey has also served as President of the North American Regional Science Council, the Regional Science Association. He was presented with the Founder's medal in 2020.

  11. Jacques Thisse a Fellow of the Econometric Society, of the Regional Science Association International and of the Centre for Economic Policy Research, is professor Emeritus of economics and regional science at the Université catholique de Louvain (Belgium) and a member of CORE. He has published over 150 articles in different international journals (Econometrica, American Economic Review, Journal of Economic Theory, Operations Research, etc) and in different disciplines such as industrial economics, spatial economics, international economics and management science. He is the co-author of Discrete Choice Theory of Product differentiation and of Economics of Agglomeration. He is particularly interested in product differentiation, heterogeneous consumers and firms in various types of market structure and spatial settings, as well as in the spatial organization of economic activities. He has been a Visiting Invited Professor in many departments, most recently at Columbia economics department and has received many prestigious awards, amongst which the Solvay price of the Belgian Science foundation in 2006.
Thursday, 11 April 2013 17:57

Other Journals

A

 

C

 

E

 

G

   
asap asian cities computers recg20 economicsystemsrescov 3050502X gean grow
Applied Spatial Analysis and Policy
Asia-Pacific Journal of Regional Science
Cities
Computers, Environment and Urban Systems 
Economic Geography
Economic Systems Research
Global Challenges & Regional Science
Geographical Analysis
Growth and Change

 I

   

 J

         
ijur.v45.1.cover irxa 44 1.cover cover issue 3954 es ES m jnlecg 20 6cover journal of geographical systems journal1609846103 JGRP RAP jors.v60.5.cover JES
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
International Regional Science Review
Investigaciones Regionales-Journal of Regional Research
Journal of Economic Geography
Journal of Geographical Systems
Journal of Geography and Regional Planning
Journal of Regional Analysis and Policy
Journal of Regional Science
Journal of Economic Structures

 

 

L

N

P

R

 

   
ujua20 urbanj letters of spatial and resource science networks and spatial economics X10568190 cover rspp regsecteconomicstudiesjournal rsuev RSIK
Journal of Urban Affairs Journal of Urban Economics Letters in Spatial and Resource Sciences Networks and Spatial Economics Papers in Regional Science Regional Science Policy & Practice Regional and Sectoral Economic Studies Regional Science and Urban Economics Regional Science Inquiry
               

S

capa57 ROMANIAN2 10037 rurd.v31.3.cover cover issue region Páginas de 33 21 PB RERU 124 L148 reg stat bor SEP
Revista Portuguesa de Estudos Regionais Romanian Journal of Regional Science
Review of Regional Research
Review of Urban and Regional Development Studies
REGION
Revista Brasileira de Estudos Regionais e Urbanos
Revue d’Economie Régionale et Urbaine
Regional Statistics Socio-Economic Planning Sciences
       

T

 

 

saje.v88.4.cover rsea20 Studies in Regional Science 1720 3929 coverarticle1 V43N2 TABLE MATIERES RRS Journal Cover 5-2012 ICO TRPa
the annals of regional science
South African Journal of Economics Spatial Economic Analysis Studies in Regional Science
Scienze regionali, Italian Journal of Regional Science
Sustainable Regional Development Scientific Journal
The Canadian Journal of Regional Science
The Review of Regional Studies
Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice
The Annals of Regional Science

U

               
urban stduies                
Urban Studies                
Thursday, 11 April 2013 17:48

RSPP

RSPP

Regional Science Policy & Practice (RSPP) is an open access journal published by Elsevier on behalf of the RSAI.

Although RSPP charges Article Processing Charges (APCs), Elsevier has signed agreements with many countries and universities that allow papers to be fully or partially free of APCs (Please check here your situation).

Nevertheless, the Editorial Team of RSPP can allocate waivers or provide some support to authors to secure the publication of accepted papers that fit into Special Issues and do not have enough funding. This situation must be addressed when submitting the paper.

To access Regional Science Policy & Practice visit https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/regional-science-policy-and-practice

Our journals are now both publushed Gold Open Access with Elsevier; APCs are USD 2740 for PiRS and USD 1596 for RSPP.

However:

  • Selected Countries, beneficiaries of the Research4Life program, are eligible for a 100% or a 50% discount on APCs;
  • Authors from entities with an institutional agreement with Elsevier do not pay APCs;
  • PiRS' editorial team has 20 waivers, and RSPP's has 50 waivers, to allocate each year for accepted articles based on the decision of the EiCs, and the merits of each paper;
  • If none of the former applies, RSAI members are in any case eligible for a 20% discount on APCs.

SCImago Journal & Country Rank

Journal Impact Factor™ of 1.7

Scopus 2023 CiteScore: 3.6

Scopus Citescore Category Rankings 2023:
- Geography, Planning and Development - 258/821
- Development - 90/360
- Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law - 185/399
SCImago Journal Rank 2023:  0.585
SNIP 2023: 0.892
Google Scholar logo
     
 

 

       

youtube

RSPP Working Papers

Special Series on Covid-19

RSPP Working Paper nº 2020.001
By Ilyes Boumahdi, Nouzha Zaoujal and Abdellali Fadlallah

Aims and Scope

Regional Science Policy and Practice (RSPP) is the journal of the Regional Science Association International that publish high quality papers in regional science, assumed to be the discipline that looks at people’s and places interaction within space; with sound, replicable and advanced methods; suitable to generate robust evidences that are able to inform effective policies for regional sustainable development. It welcomes papers from a range of academic disciplines and practitioners including planning, public policy, geography, economics and environmental science and related fields. Papers should address the interface between academic debates and policy development and application. RSPP provides an opportunity for academics and policy makers to develop a dialogue to identify and explore many of the challenges facing local and regional economies.

RSPP publishes high quality papers targeted at informing the policy development process leading to the formation of theoretically grounded regional policy. The editors invite submissions dealing with the policy and practice of regional and local development. Contributions that are the outcome of collaborations between researchers and policy and practice professions are encouraged.

Keywords

regional, science, policy, practice, RSAI, journal, geography, applied, local development, planning, public policy, economics, environmental science

Abstracting and Indexing Information

  • Academic OneFile (GALE Cengage)
  • Emerging Sources Citation Index (Clarivate Analytics)
  • Environment Abstracts (ProQuest)
  • Environmental Sciences & Pollution Management (ProQuest)
  • InfoTrac (GALE Cengage)
  • Political Science Complete (EBSCO Publishing)
  • SCOPUS (Elsevier)
  • Sustainability Science Abstracts (ProQuest)
  • Web of Science (Clarivate Analytics)

Please note: Members of the Regional Science Association International are eligible for a 20% discount on the article publishing charge.

Thursday, 11 April 2013 17:37

PiRS

Papers in Regional Science (PiRS) is published by Elsevier on behalf of the RSAI. To access Papers in Regional Science visit https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/papers-in-regional-science

Our journals are now both published Gold Open Access with Elsevier; APCs are USD 2740 for PiRS and USD 1596 for RSPP.

However:

  • Selected Countries, beneficiaries of the Research4Life program, are eligible for a 100% or a 50% discount on APCs;
  • Authors from entities with an institutional agreement with Elsevier do not pay APCs;
  • PiRS' editorial team has 20 waivers, and RSPP's has 50 waivers, to allocate each year for accepted articles based on the decision of the EiCs, and the merits of each paper;
  • If none of the former applies, RSAI members are in any case eligible for a 20% discount on APCs.

pirsAims and Scope

Papers in Regional Science is the official journal of the Regional Science Association International. It encourages high quality scholarship on a broad range of topics in the field of regional science. These topics include, but are not limited to, behavioural modelling of location, transportation, and migration decisions, land use and urban development, inter-industry analysis, environmental and ecological analysis, resource management, urban and regional policy analysis, geographical information systems, and spatial statistics.

The journal publishes papers that make a new contribution to the theory, methods and models related to urban and regional (or spatial) matters. The editors invite submissions of papers that emphasize the application of theoretical frameworks, methods and models, developed specifically for the study of urban and regional phenomena. They also welcome contributions to the understanding of regional phenomena that employ theoretical frameworks and methods developed in other fields.

Key words

papers, regional, science, RSAI, journal, geography, location, transportation, migration, urban, development, environment, policy, spatial, resource management

Abstracting and Indexing Information

  • Academic Search (EBSCO Publishing)
  • Academic Search Premier (EBSCO Publishing)
  • AgeLine Database (EBSCO Publishing)
  • Current Contents: Social & Behavioral Sciences (Thomson Reuters)
  • EconLit (AEA)
  • GEOBASE (Elsevier)
  • IBSS: International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (ProQuest)
  • Journal Citation Reports/Social Science Edition (Thomson Reuters)
  • RePEc: Research Papers in Economics
  • SCOPUS (Elsevier)
  • Social Sciences Citation Index (Thomson Reuters)

Google Scholar logo

 Please note: Members of the Regional Science Association International are eligible for a 20% discount on the article publishing charge.

Thursday, 11 April 2013 16:44

The Benjamin H. Stevens Graduate Fellowship

THE BENJAMIN H. STEVENS 2020–2021

Graduate Fellowship in Regional Science

Graduate students enrolled in Ph.D. programs in North America are encouraged to apply for the Twentieth Benjamin H. Stevens Graduate Fellowship in Regional Science, administered by the North American Regional Science Council of the Regional Science Association International (NARSC-RSAI). This Fellowship, in support of dissertation research in Regional Science, is awarded annually in memory of Dr. Benjamin H. Stevens, an intellectual leader whose selfless devotion to graduate students as teacher, advisor, mentor, and friend had a profound impact on the field. Regional Science is a multidisciplinary field concerned with the theory and method of urban and regional phenomena. Regional Scientists apply theoretical and empirical frameworks and methods of the social and other sciences, as well as develop new ones specifically for regional analysis and policy.

Eligible students should have completed all degree requirements except for their dissertation by the time the Fellowship commences. A requirement of the Fellowship is that the recipient have no duties other than dissertation research during the Fellowship, although the recipient may hold other fellowships concurrently. Applications from students working in any area and any North American Ph.D. program are welcome as long as their dissertation research addresses a research question in Regional Science.

The Fellowship consists of a stipend in the amount of $30,000 (U.S.), paid over a twelve-month period. Applications for the 2020–2021 Fellowship should be sent electronically by the applicant to the Selection Committee Chair, Professor Elizabeth Mack, by the deadline of February 15, 2020.

An application consists of the following materials:

  1. A curriculum vita of no more than two (2) pages in length.
  2. A statement in ten (10) pages or less explaining the questions and issues to be addressed, the approach to be used, and the product expected from the dissertation research, preceded by a summary (1-page maximum) describing the intellectual merit of the proposed research, and the broader impacts that may result. The 10-page limit is inclusive of references, but exclusive of tables and figures. This text should be in 12-point or larger font, double-spaced, with one-inch margins; references may be single-spaced.
  3. Copies of the candidate’s transcripts for all graduate study. Unofficial copies are acceptable.

In addition, the dissertation supervisor shall provide a confidential letter sent separately as an attachment from her/his email account with the student’s name in the subject line to Professor Mack. In the letter the supervisor should assess the quality and significance of the proposed dissertation research, specify the current state of progress toward the candidate’s degree, and provide a commitment by the dissertation supervisor to obtain a tuition waiver for the candidate for the year of the Fellowship. A condition of the Fellowship is the granting of a tuition waiver for the year of the Fellowship by the university, or equivalent payment of the student’s tuition.

Applications should be emailed to Professor Elizabeth Mack at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Questions may also be sent to her at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. For information about the North American Regional Science Council (NARSC), go to www.narsc.org.

May 13, 2015
Last revised, July 23, 2019

The Benjamin H. Stevens Graduate Fellowship in Regional Science was previously awarded to the following students:

  • 2000 Michael J. Greenwald (University of California, Irvine; Marlon Boarnet, advisor)
  • 2001 Rachel Franklin (University of Arizona; Brigitte Waldorf, advisor)
  • 2002 JungWon Son (University of California-Los Angeles; Leobardo Estrada, advisor)
  • 2003 Alison Davis Reum (North Carolina State University; V. Kerry Smith, advisor)
  • 2004 Nicholas Nagle (Univ. of California-Santa Barbara; Stuart H. Sweeney, advisor)
  • 2005 Xiaokun Wang (University of Texas at Austin; Kara Kockelman, advisor)
  • 2006 Joshua Drucker (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; H. Goldstein and E. Feser, advisors)
  • 2007 Alvin Murphy (Duke University; Patrick Bayer, advisor)
  • 2008 Paavo Monkkonen (University of California, Berkeley; David E. Dowall, advisor)
  • 2009 Elizabeth Mack (Indiana University; Tony H. Grubesic, advisor)
  • 2010 Adam Storeygard (Brown University; J. Vernon Henderson, advisor)
  • 2011 Peter Richards (Michigan State University; Robert Walker, advisor)
  • 2012 Ran Wei (Arizona State University; Alan Murray, advisor)
  • 2013  Zhenhua Chen (George Mason University; Kingsley Haynes, advisor)
  • 2014 No Fellowship Awarded
  • 2015 Ahmadreza Faghih Imani ( McGill University; Naveen Eluru, advisor)
  • 2016  Nick Tsivanidis (University of Chicago; Chang-Tai Hsieh, advisor)
  • 2017  Lindsay Relihan (University of Pennsylvania; Gilles Duranton, advisor)
  • 2018 Daniel Crown (The Ohio State University; Mark Partridge, advisor)
  • 2019 Prottoy A. Akbar (University of Pittsburgh, Randall Walsh, advisor)

More information at: http://www.narsc.org/newsite/awards-prizes/stevens-graduate-fellowship/

Thursday, 11 April 2013 16:43

RSAI Fellows

2024

     
higanoyoshiro
University of Tsukuba, Japan
2 haddad 1
University of São Paulo, Brazil
andrea
Politecnico di Milano, Italy
 

2023

     
hqdefault
University of Sao Paulo, BRAZIL
denise pumain
Géographie-cités, FRANCE
photoerik
University of Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS
 

2022

     
Atorre1
University Paris-Saclay, FRANCE
budyresosudarmo
Australian National University, AUSTRALIA
1bebc9fa059394d69cb19e9ffb69634f
Erasmus University Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
GG headshot full 500x500
University of Southern California, USA

2021

     
AMIT
Rochester Institute of Technology, USA
ALESSANDRA
Gran Sasso Science Institute (GSSI), ITALY
1200x
West Virginia University, USA
KKstairway
University of Texas at Austin, USA

2020

     
jouke
University of Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS
juan
University of Alcalà, SPAIN
   

2019

     
Michael Batty
University College London, UK
Ingmar Prucha
University of Maryland, USA
isabella
Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium
 

2018

     
kohlhase3
University of Houston, USA
alan 1
University of California at Santa Barbara, USA
dan
Oklahoma State University, USA
ANDRES
London School of Economics, UK

2017

     
MBoarnet tq0854
University of Southern California, USA
rcamagni 02
Roberto Camagni (deceased, 2023)
Politecnico di Milano, Italy
adamrose
University of Southern California, USA
 

2016

     
Professor Philip McCann
University of Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS
 Partridge Mark1
The Ohio State University, USA
 rey
Arizona State University, USA
 

2015

     
donaghy
Cornell University, USA
florax
Raymond J.G.M. Florax (deceased, 2017)
Purdue University, USA
poot
University of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
 

2014

     
gilles
University of Pennsylvania, USA
Strange W
University of Toronto, Canada
 

 

 

 

2013

roberta
Polytechnic Milano, ITALY
kiyoshi
Kyoto University, JAPAN
tonnu
Tönu Puu (deceased, 2020)
University of Umeå, SWEDEN
thill
University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA

2012

Brian berry
The University of Texas at Dallas, USA
MILLER RON 024 pp COLOR
Ronald E. Miller (deceased, 2023)
University of Pennsylvania, USA
stuart
Syracuse University, USA
zenou
Stockholm University, SWEDEN

2011

ake
Åke E. Anderson (deceased, 2021)
Jönköping International Business School, SWEDEN
gordon mulligan
Gordon Mulligan (deceased, 2023)
University of Arizona, USA
   

2010

Princeton University, USA
diego
Madrid Institute for Advanced Studies, SPAIN
University of Bologna, ITALY
bob stimson
University of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, USA
University of Washington, USA
sonis michael
Michael Sonis (deceased, 2016)
Bar-Ilan University, ISRAEL
plane
University of Arizona, USA
verhoef
VU University Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
folmer
Wageningen and Groningen Universities, THE NETHERLANDS
 
 

2009

bailey
Antoine Bailly (deceased, 2021)
University of Geneva, SWITZERLAND
rchurch
University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
benard
University of Strathclyde, UK
reginald
Reginald Golledge (deceased, 2009)
University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
petergordon
University of Southern California, USA
daniel
University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Keith Ihlanfeldt
Florida State University, USA
lesaje
Texas State University, USA
janice
University of Pennsylvania, USA
piet r
Piet Rietveld (deceased, 2013)
VU University Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
venables
University of Oxford, UK
 

2008

tr
T.R. Lakshmanan (deceased, 2020)
Boston University, USA
MCmillen
University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
John McDonald1 jpg
University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
oosterhavenJ
University of Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS
Harry W. Richardson
Harry W. Richardson
University of Southern California, USA
sthoug
Roger Stough (deceased, 2019)
George Mason University, USA
taka
University of Tokyo, JAPAN
 

2007

kanemoto
University of Tokyo, JAPAN
harry
Harry H. Kelejian (deceased, 2024)
University of Maryland, USA
ana
University of Massachusetts, USA
Stough-Papageorgiou
McMaster University, CANADA
allan
University College London, England, UK
 
 
 

2006

alex
SUNY Buffalo, USA
 
arnott
Richard Arnott (deceased, 2023)
Boston College, USA
peterbatey
University of Liverpool, UK
manfred
WU Wien, Vienna, AUSTRIA
greenwood
University of Colorado, Boulder, USA
haynes
George Mason University, USA
kim
 University of Illinois, USA
ann markusen
University of Minnesota, USA
parr
John Parr (deceased, 2023)
University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK
small
University of California, Irvine, USA
 
 

2005

marcus
Washington University in Saint Louis, USA
brueckner
University of California, Irvine, USA
getis
Arthur Getis (deceased, 2022)
San Diego State University, USA
pines
Tel-Aviv University, ISRAEL
karen
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
 
 
 

2004  

anselim
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
henderson
Brown University, USA
peter
Erasmus University, NETHERLANDS
quigley
John M. Quigley (deceased, 2012)
University of California, Berkeley, USA

2003

fujita
Kyoto University, JAPAN
hewings
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
tony
University of Pennsylvania, USA
thisse
Catholic University of Louvain, BELGIUM

2002

RSAI Council initiated the RSAI Fellows Award to honour a select group of members of the Association who have made important scholarly and research contributions to the field of regional science. The inaugural Fellows were the living recipients of the Founder's Medal at that time   

Isard portait
Walter Isard (deceased, 2010)
Cornell University, USA
beckmann
Martin Beckmann (deceased, 2017)
Brown University, USA and Technical University of Munich, Germany
Paelinck
Jean Paelinck (deceased, 2025)
Erasmus University, NETHERLANDS
boyce
Northwestern University, USA
 

RSAI Fellows

RSAI fellows are distinguished scholars with a proven and recognized research record in the field of regional science during a considerable part of their scientific career. Such honoured members of the RSAI are appointed after a careful nomination and selection procedure, based on a broad consultation of the RSAI membership.

The RSAI fellowship is a world-wide sign of scientific recognition that is bestowed on a regional scientist with outstanding research credentials in his/her field. The RSAI fellowship does not imply any obligation to the Association, although it is expected that fellows on a voluntary basis will serve the scientific objectives of the RSAI whenever possible or appropriate.

Regional science has witnessed a great increase in scholarly interest and scientific publications all over the world. To create a vital Association, it is therefore critical that senior members - and, in particular, RSAI fellows – act as a role model, in particular for a younger generation. The RSAI membership should have the highest expectations on – and appreciation for – its fellows, given their past seminal research contributions.

RSAI fellows may contribute to the fulfillment of the goals of the Association by offering a scientific service or incentive to its members through various means, such as:

  • Organization of a fellows’ meeting at any conference venue, where a major RSAI conference is taking place (ERSA, NARSC, PRSCO, World Conference). This could be a socializing meeting (e.g., a luncheon or late afternoon drinks) or a substantive meeting (e.g., an exploratory venue addressing future research strategies or topics).
  • Organization of dedicated panels or focused fellows’ sessions at any major international or supraregional RSAI meeting with the aim to reflect on new methodologies or promising approaches in research.
  • Organization of early-bird (breakfast) meetings, luncheon meetings or late afternoon drinks meetings with a small group of young researchers, based on an open subscription/application system, in which informal presentations (5-10 minutes) are held by young researchers (‘meet the professor’ meetings).
  • Organization of a solid pre-conference special session at any major RSAI conference, with a balanced mix of seniors (in particular, RSAI fellows) and juniors (‘rising stars’), where fellows and rising stars present recent research work (in the long run, even joint senior-junior research work could be foreseen).
  • Organization of short ‘next gen’ training courses, prior to any major conference.
  • Organization of a voluntary ‘Foster Fellow Plan’, in which an RSAI fellow is willing to adopt for a period of (e.g.) one year a selected young researcher from a different country –in consultation with his/her supervisor – with the aim to provide network contacts or scientific guidance, or perhaps to start a joint research project.
  • Organization of an RSAI column by a fellow in any issue of the RSAI Newsletter (after consultation of the Newsletter editors).

Any meeting or panel at conferences needs to be done in consultation with the conference organizers.

Limit on the Number of Fellows

  1. An upper limit on the number of fellows is set at 5% of the membership of RSAI.
  2. Fellows who are deceased are not counted in the upper limit on the number of fellows set out in 1 above.

Nomination and Selection Protocol of RSAI Fellows:

  1. Each RSAI member - except RSAI fellows – is entitled to nominate candidates for the RSAI fellowship, but self-nominations are not allowed. Each nomination has to be done through a standard concise nomination form that follows a systematic template.
  2. A nominee has to be RSAI member (or a member of any section recognized by the RSAI) and to meet the qualifications mentioned in Annex A.
  3. The selection of new RSAI fellows takes place only once a year, but nominations can be sent in at any time and will be considered for a given selection round, if they have been received before a given deadline. A nomination has a maximum life of two years.
  4. All nominations will be put on a list supplemented with non-elected candidates for the RSAI fellowship who were on the short list from the previous year.
  5. The short list will be screened by the RSAI fellows selection committee (in consultation with the RSAI President and Executive Director). This committee comprises 3 RSAI fellows appointed by the RSAI Council for a period of staggered 3-year terms. The President and Executive Director will make the nominations for Council’s consideration unless Council sets up a special committee that handles this nomination process. The selection committee has to seriously consider all available information on the candidates and can remove candidates (unanimous vote) who do not qualify.
  6. The selection committee can also decide to reduce the list of nominated RSAI members to a manageable number, so that candidates can be selected with a qualified majority. This short list should normally not contain more than 10 to 12 names and no fewer than 8 names (unless the number of nominations is fewer than eight).
  7. The short list is next circulated to all RSAI fellows, who have the exclusive right to vote for (a maximum of) 3 candidate-fellows. No ranking of candidates is allowed.
  8. The only upper ceiling that may be imposed on the number of candidates in a given year is a number that would result in exceeding the limit on the total number of Fellows permitted as a percentage of the membership of RSAI.
  9. A vote of at least 1/3 will normally mean election, unless that would exceed the ceiling referred to in #8 above.
  10. The selection committee informs the RSAI Director of the final selection results, who will communicate these results to the selected RSAI fellows, the RSAI Council, and the home institutions of the newly appointed fellows.

Standard Nomination Form for RSAI Fellows:

  1. Factual bio-data on candidate, including a proof for RSAI membership
  2. Professional career of candidate (max. 100 words)
  3. Substantive contribution to regional science (max. 200 words)
  4. Path-breaking publications on regional science (max. 5)
  5. Signs of international scientific recognition (max. 50 words)
  6. Reasons for nominating the candidate (max. 50 words)

To ensure full consideration by the committee, these materials should be provided in electronic format (pdf preferred) by April 15 of each year.

Submit nominations by April 15, 2025 to:

Ana Vinuela, RSAI Executive Director (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.)

Thursday, 11 April 2013 16:42

RSAI Dissertation Award

Call for submissions

2025 RSAI Best Dissertation in Regional Science

The Regional Science Association International (RSAI) invites submissions for the annual competition for the Best Doctoral Dissertation in Regional Science. Regional science is an interdisciplinary field concerned with theory, method, and application of regional, urban and rural, geographic and spatial investigations and analyses.

The winner will be decided by the Selection Committee and will receive a cash award of 750 Euros. Award announcements will be made at the North American Meetings of the RSAI, where participants in the competition are strongly encouraged to be present. The Selection Committee reserves the right to not make an award. Decisions made by the Selection Committee are final.

Eligibility:

  1. A dissertation completed in any PhD program in any country is eligible,
  2. A dissertation written in English,
  3. A dissertation successfully defended, with official graduation date between July 1st 2024 and June 30th 2025,
  4. A dissertation on a single or multiple general regional science topics. The Selection Committee reserves the right to determine whether a dissertation is relevant to the field of regional science. 

Application (in either PDF or MS Word format):

  1. A two-page curriculum vita;
  2. A letter of support and nomination from the major professor (also known as a dissertation committee chairperson or supervisor) on stationary paper and with signature. The letter should clearly explain the dissertation’s originality and contributions to the field of regional science;
  3. The dissertation.

Applications should be submitted electrically by August 31, 2025, to the Chair of the Selection Committee, Dimitris Ballas (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.). Large submissions can be uploaded to a cloud file-sharing site. Questions regarding the dissertation competition may be sent to him too. 

 

Winners 

2024

                 

 2023

Felix PotFelix Pot is chosen as the winner of the RSAI dissertation award in 2024 for his work ''The Extra Mile: Perceived Accessibility in Rural Areas'.

The dissertation presents a novel conceptual and methodological approach to the analysis of perceived accessibility and it shows that a lower provision of services and amenities in rural areas does not necessarily translate to lower levels of perceived accessibility compared to urban areas. The research employs both quantitative and qualitative methods to examine perceived accessibility to daily activities in rural areas in the Netherlands, contributing to the normative evaluation of spatial inequalities in accessibility. The PhD dissertation includes chapters that are already published in high quality peer-reviewed international journals, including highly cited articles in the Journal of Transport Geography.

Dr Pot received his Doctorate from the University of Groningen on 7 September 2023 (https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/the-extra-mile-perceived-accessibility-in-rural-areas) and was supervised by Prof Taede Tillema and Prof Sierdjan Koster. Congratulations! 

                 

Tian CV Yunyu Tian 2pageDr Yunyu Tian is chosen as the winner of the RSAI dissertation award in 2023 for her PhD dissertation entitled “Earth Observation data for assessing global urbanization-sustainability nexuses”, which was successfully defended (with a cum laude distinction) on 6 June 2023 at Wageningen University and Research.

The cum laude distinction (only given to around 5% of all PhD students at Wageningen University) was awarded by an extended evaluation committee of nine persons.  Dr Tian’s PhD dissertation made significant contributions towards the knowledge of urbanization and environmental changes at the global scale. The thesis included highly innovative methodological features such as the use of multi-source (and high quality) Earth Observation data and social data, contributing to academic and policy knowledge relating to global urbanization and sustainability as well as their nexus at the neighbourhood level. Part of the thesis has already been published in the form of academic peer-reviewed papers in the journals Landscape and Urban Planning (2022) and Environmental Research Letters (2022). 

The RSAI congratulates Dr. Tian and her supervisors Professor Martin Herold and Professor Eveline van Leeuwen (Wageningen University).

2022

                 

 2021

I Gede Nyoman Mindra Jaya CVThe selection committee for the RSAI Best Dissertation award has unanimously agreed to declare the PhD thesis of I Gede Nyoman Mindra Jaya entitled ‘Bayesian Spatiotemporal Modeling and Mapping of Infectious Disease: Methodology and Application to Dengue disease in Bandung and COVID-19 in West Java, Indonesia’ as winner of the 2022 RSAI Best Dissertation Award.

This thesis has already been published in the form of four academic peer-reviewed papers in the Journal of Regional Science (2021), Geographical Analysis (2021) and the Journal of Geographical Systems (2020 and 2022).  It was also unanimously awarded the cum laude (honours) distinction (for outstanding ability to conduct independent research) by the assessment and review committee (comprising Professors P. McCann, R. Bivand, A. Anshory Yusuf,J. LeSage, M. Fischer)  as well as the Tiebout Price of the Western Regional Science Association in 2019.

The RSAI congratulates Dr. Jaya and his supervisors, Prof. L.J.G. van Wissen and Prof. H. Folmer (Groningen University).

                 

andreasdAndreas Diemer is chosen as the winner of the RSAI dissertation award in 2021 for his work "Essays in the Spatial Economic Analysis of Social Interactions." The dissertation develops an interdisciplinary approach to identify the role of social networks in determining economic outcomes of both people and places, and discusses how social and geographical spaces interact to shape the fortunes of individuals and regions, using big data. The committee found his dissertation to be novel and creative in the research framework, analysis and implications. He received his Doctorate from London School of Economics, and was supervised by Professor Simona Iammarino and Prof. Michael Storper. Dr. Diemer is now at Swedish Institute for Social Research. Congratulations!

2020

                 

2019

dariIn 2020 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Daria Denti for his Thesis entitled “Essays on the Economic Geography of Oppressive Violent Deviant Behaviours". She was supervised by Professor Alessandra Faggian (GSSI), and Professor Simona Iammarino (London School of Economics and Political Science). Congratulations!

                 

Mingshu WangIn 2019 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Mingshu Wang for his Thesis entitled “Polycentric Urban Development in China”. He was supervised by Professor Marguerite Madden from the University of Georgia. Congratulations!

2018

                 

2017

Justin DelloyeIn 2018 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Justin Delloye for his Thesis entitled “Urban Morphodynamics: Reconciling Location Theory and Complex”. He was supervised by Professor Dominique Peeters and Professor Isabelle Thomas from Université Catholique de Louvain. Congratulations!

                 

Mirjam Schindler2In 2017 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Mirjam Schindler for her dissertation entitled “Spatial modelling of feedback effects between urban structure and traffic-induced air pollution - Insights from quantitative geography and urban economics”. She was supervised by Professor Geoffrey Caruso, Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning, University of Luxembourg. Congratulations!

2016 

 

 

 

           

2015 

Van Meeteren Michiel2In 2016 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Michiel van Meeteren for his dissertation entitled “From Polycentricity to a Renovated Urban Systems Theory: Explaining Belgian Settlement Geographies”. He was supervised by Professor Ben Derudder, Department of Geography, Ghent University. Congratulations!

                 

Twinam TateIn 2015 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Tate Twinam for his dissertation entitled “The Economics of Zoning”. He was supervised by Professor Arie Beresteanu, University of Pittsburgh and Professor Randall P. Walsh, University of Pittsburgh. Congratulations!

 2014

 

 

 

           

 2012

Zhenhua chenIn 2014 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Zhenhua Chen for his dissertation entitled “Transportation and Regional Output in the Northeast Megaregion: A Spatial Econometric Computable General Equilibrium Assessment”. He was supervised by Professor Kingsley Haynes, George Mason University. Congratulations!

                 

In 2012 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Carlianne Elizabeth Patrick for her work "Essays in Economic Growth and Development Policy". She was supervised by Prof. Dr. Mark Partridge. Congratulations! 

 2011

 

 

 

           

 2010

In 2011 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Tijs Neutens for his work "Space, time and accessibility: Analyzing human activities and travel possibilities from a time-geographic perspective". He was supervised by Prof. Dr. Philippe De Maeyer, Prof. Dr. Frank Witlox and Dr. Tim Schwane. Congratulations!

                 

In 2010 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Frank Neffke from Erasmus School of Economics for his dissertation “Productive Places: The Influence of Technological Change and Relatedness on Agglomeration Externalities” at Utrecht University. Congratulations!

 2008

 

 

 

           

 2006

In 2008 the winner of the RSAI dissertation prize was Maarten Bosker of Groningen University. Runner-up was Nancy Lozano of Arizona State University. Congratulations to both!

                 

The RSAI presented its annual Dissertation Competition award at the 2006 North American meetings in Toronto to Dr. Eric Delmelle for his thesis entitled “Optimization of Second-Phase Spatial Sampling Using Auxiliary Information.” Dr. Delmelle received his Doctorate from the State University of New York at Buffalo and was supervised by Prof. Peter Rogerson. Honourable Mentions were awarded to Drs. Georgeanne Artz (PhD: University of Iowa) and Julie Hwang (PhD: SUNY at Buffalo).

 2005

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 2004

The RSAI presented its annual Dissertation Competition award at the 2005 North American meetings in Las Vegas to Dr. Ikuho Yamada Analysis for her work "Spatial Clusters when the Phenomenon is Constrained by a Network Space". Dr. Yamada received her Doctorate from the State University of New York at Buffalo, and was supervised by Prof. Jean-Claude Thill.

                 

Sjoerd Beugelsdijk received the 2004 RSAI dissertation competition award for his work "Culture and Economic Development." Dr. Beugelsdijk received his Doctorate from Tiburg University and was supervised by Professor Noorderhaven.

 2003

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2002

Jun Koo received the 2003 dissertation competition award for his work "When Technology Spillovers Are Localized: Importance of Regional and Industrial Attributes." Dr. Koo received his Doctorate from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and was supervised by Professor Harvey Goldstein. Koo is now at Cleveland State University.

                 

Adelheid Holl received the 2002 dissertation competition award for her work entitled "Transport Infrastructure in Lagging European Regions."

The Peter Nijkamp RSAI Research Encouragement Award for an Mid-Career Scholar from a Developing Country

Call for applications

The Peter Nijkamp Research Encouragement Award

The award recognizes the outstanding potential of a mid-career researcher from a nation in the developing world in which there is a section of RSAI. Conditions for applications are:

  • No more than 10 years from the doctoral qualification (by Dec 31, 2022);
  • Live in developing nations continuously for at least three years as at Dec 31, 2022;
  • Be a member of RSAI in good standing;
  • Submit a written formal research paper on a topic in Regional Science;
  • Submit an updated version of CV.

All material must be submitted to the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 

Nominees will be judged in part on the evaluation of the paper and in part on an evaluation of the research track record and performance (CV).

The winner(s) will receive support, up to 750 Euro, to participate in a Supra-Regional meeting or in the World Congress, at which the paper will be presented.

The jury will comprise the Immediate Past-President of RSAI as Chair, an Editor of Papers in Regional Science, and two RSAI Fellows.

Deadline for the applications: May 31, 2025. 

Winners

 

2024

 

2022

       
 

pedroamaral

Pedro Amaral

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil

 

grace

Carolina Guevara-Rosero

The Ecuador National Polytechnic School, Ecuador

       
 

2020

 

2017

       
 

Yi Niu

Yi Niu

Capital University of Economics and Business,

 Bejing, China

 

dusan

Dusan Paredes

Universidad Catolica del Norte, Chile

 

antony

Anthony Howell

Peking University, China

   
 

2012

 

2011

   
 

 luisgalvis

Luis Armando Galvis

CEER - Banco de la Republica, Colombia

 

Fernando Salgueiro Perobelli

Federal University of Juiz de Fora, Brazil

  

Arief Anshory Yusuf

Padjadjaran University, Indonesia

1. Goal 

The Award recognizes the outstanding potential of an mid-career researcher from a nation in the developing world and in which there is a formal Section of RSAI, and seeks to encourage the development of the early career scholar as a high quality researcher in the field of Regional Science and as a participant in the international Regional Science community.

2. The Award and Eligibility

2.1 The Award is established to recognize and honour the outstanding contribution Professor Peter Nijkamp, a Fellow of RSAI and an outstanding regional science researcher, has made to the encouragement and involvement of young scholars in Regional Science research and activities.

2.2 The Award recognizes the potential of outstanding scholarship in Regional Science in an mid-career researcher working in a developing nation where there is a Section of RSAI. 

2.3 Each year the RSAI Council will nominate a list of countries which it designates as a developing nation, and in which there is a Section of RSAI, for the purpose of eligibility for the purpose of the Award. 

2.4 Eligibility to apply for the Award is restricted to mid-career researchers, defined as person in full time employment in either a teaching or a research position in a university or research institution in a developing nation in which there is a member section of RSAI, and who has held their doctoral qualification for no more than ten (10) years as at the 31 December in the year in which they apply for the Award. 

2.5 An applicant for the Award must have been living in that or another developing nation continuously for at least the three year period from the 31 December of the year in which the application for the Award is made. 

2.6 An applicant for the Award must be a member of RSAI. 

2.7 The Award is made for what is judged in part on an evaluation of the quality of a written formal research paper on a topic in Regional Science, formatted in accordance with the requirements for submitting a paper Papers in Regional Science, and in part on an evaluation of the research track record and performance of the applicant as demonstrated in a full Curriculum Vitae.

2.8 RSAI will pay the costs of the winner of the Award to attend a meeting of one of the Supra-Regional organizations in RSAI (NARSC,ERSA, PRSCO) or the RSAI World Congress, participate in the conference, present paper at that meeting, and have the paper submitted for review and potential publication in Papers in Regional Science. The costs to be met by RSAI are an advance purchase air fare, conference registration, and accommodation at the conference. 

2.9 A winner of the Award will be presented with a certificate at the RSAI meeting at which the winner attends and presents the winning paper.

2.10 Up to two (2) Awards may be made in any one year.

3. Nomination Process

3.1 By April each year the Executive Director will contact members of RSAI and post on the RSAI website a notice calling for applications for the Peter Nijkamp RSAI Research Encouragement Award for an Mid-Career Scholar from a Developing Country Award.

3.2 An eligible mid-career researcher from an eligible developing nation may submit a paper and their CV to the RSAI Executive Secretary for consideration for the Award at any time up to the end of November of that year.

3.3 An applicant for the Award must provide the RSAI Executive Director with an electronic copy of a paper, formatted in accordance with the requirements for submitting a manuscript to Papers in Regional Science, that is intended to be presented or which has been accepted for presentation to a forthcoming NARSC, ERSA or PRSCO conference or the RSAI World Congress.

3.4 In addition, an applicant for the Award must provide the RSAI Executive Director with an electronic copy of their up-to-date CV.

4. Jury and Process for Recommending the Award

4.1 In the last quarter of each year, a four person Jury will be named by the RSAI Council to consider the nominations for the Peter Nijkamp RSAI Research Encouragement Award for an mid-Career Scholar from a Developing Country.

4.2 The Jury will comprise the Immediate Past-President of RSAI as Chair, an Editor of Papers in Regional Science, and two Fellows of RSAI.

4.3 The Jury will convene (in person and/or by email/teleconference) after 1 January in the following calendar year.

4.4 The Jury will evaluate the applications received and passed onto it by the RSAI Executive Director. The Jury will submit its recommendation(s) to the RSAI Executive Director by the end of February in that year.

4.5 The RSAI Executive Secretary will inform the winner(s) of the Award and, up to a limit of 750 € will  make arrangements for their travel to the Supra-Regional (NARSC, ERSA, PRSCO) meeting or the RSAI World Congress at which the paper will be presented.

4.6 The Award must be taken up and the winner(s) attend the conference nominated during that year or the Award will lapse.

4.7 The Award will be presented to the Awardee(s) at the meeting at which the paper is presented by the Awardee(s).

Thursday, 11 April 2013 16:39

The Martin Beckmann RSAI Annual Award

The Martin Beckmann RSAI Annual Award for the Best Paper in Papers in Regional Science

Winner 2025

The commission for the 2025 Martin Beckmann award composed by the RSAI Fellows Eduardo Haddad (LARSA), Janet Kohlhase (NARSC), Erik Verhoef, (ERSA) and Rosella Nicolini (EiC of PIRS), has completed the selection of the papers published in Papers in Regional Science (PIRS) in 2024..

The commission selected the following article as the recipient of the 2025 Martin Beckmann award

Giorgio Fazio, Sara Maioli, Nirat Rujimora
, "Building back greener, levelling-up or both? An assessment of the economic and environmental efficiency transition of UK regions",
Published in Papers in Regional Science, Volume 103, Issue 6, 2024, 100053, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1056819024000733

Motivation:

This contribution tackles the relevant and open question of the implementation of effective policies to achieve two goals at regional level: “building back greener” and “levelling-up”. The approach implemented by the authors is empirical. The setting of reference is the UK regions for the period 2005-2020 and their study relies on an original data sample. The research strategy exploits the Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) to calculate the regional and environmental efficiency, whereas the computation of the Markov transition probabilities is meant to quantify the regional transition probabilities to improve at least one the two previous efficiencies. Results emphasize that there is a trade-off between the two types of efficiencies for more than half of the regions and that the costs of transition are unequally distributed. Authors also identify that regions are more likely to become efficient in both directions if they are already environmentally efficient. Furthermore, the empirical analysis does not provide evidence of spatial spillovers for the environmental transition process, but they matter for regional economic efficiency.  The final discussion of this contribution is timely and relevant to inspire effective regional policies. Evidence at hand suggests that there is a clear need of strong coordination between place-based policy and national governments to fully achieve the two selected goals.

 

Previous winners

2024

The jury consisting of Carlos Azzoni (LARSA), Janet Kohlhase (NARSC), Frank van Oort (ERSA) and Rosella Nicolini (ERSA, PiRS EiC) chose the article:

Vicente Rios, Mercedes Beltrán‐Esteve, Lisa Gianmoena, Jesús Peiró‐Palomino, Andrés J Picazo‐Tadeo (2023): Quality of government and women's political empowerment: Evidence from European Regions, Papers in Regional Science vol. 102, issue 6, pp. 1067-1097.

Motivation:

This study proposes a novel contribution that shifts the research frontier of the literature on the quality of government, from a regional perspective, by emphasizing the relevance of the gender dimension. Referring to European regions, the authors produce valuable insights endorsed by precise quantitative evidence on the extent women’s political empowerment rises the quality of the government that, in turn, boosts female empowerment. From a technical viewpoint, this contribution implements a solid research methodology that addresses endogeneity with a tailored identification strategy by exploiting GS3SLS-RF method and dealing with spatial analysis in a causal framework.

as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2023.

2023

The jury consisting of Budy Resosudarmo (PRSCO), William Strange (NARSC), Isabelle Thomas (ERSA) and Rosella Nicolini, EiC of the journal chose the article:

Jhorland Ayala-García and Sandy Dall'Erba (2022) The Impact of preemptive investments on Natural disasterspublished in Papers in Regional Science, Volume 101, Issue 5, Pages 1087-1103.

Motivation:

This study delivers a very original contribution to the current and relevant debate on the role of institutions and public policies aiming at contrasting the socioeconomic impact of natural disasters on citizens’ life. The authors implement a precise research strategy approaching physical geography to regional science. They exploit novel and original data combining satellite information with public finance data for Colombian municipality and propose different indicators for approximating the market and non-market losses of landslide-related events (associated with extreme rainfalls events due to climate change). The empirical analysis relies on a robust IV approach building on a very attentive selection of covariates fitting the proposed indicators. The conclusion is a direct message to institutions and policy-makers demanding effective measures to protect lives and assets of the most vulnerable population.

as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2022.

2022

The jury consisting of Roberta Capello, Randal Jackson and William Strange chose the article:

The persistent pay gap between Easterners and Westerners in Germany: A quarter-century after Reunification, Heather Dickey and Alessa M. Widmaier, published in Volume 100, Issue 3, 2021, Pages 605-631

Motivation:

This excellent contribution tackles two relevant orders of questions: the sources of the wage gap between East and West Germany and the wage differentials within the two regions.  Unlike much prior work, the convergence process is considered up to the present in order to understand the persistence of the regional wage gap. One of the salient results of this publication is that part of the wage gap within the former East Germany remains unexplained. The conceptual framework is solid and the problem is situated beautifully in the relevant literature. The analysis is innovative and thorough, and the writing exceptionally readable.

as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2021.

2021

The jury consisting of Janet Kohlhase, Dan Rickman and Jouke van Dijk chose the article:

Optimizing entrepreneurial development processes for smart specialization in the European Union, by László Szerb, Raquel Ortega-Argilés, Zoltan J. Acs, and Éva Komlósi, published in Volume 99, Issue 5, October 2020, Pages 1413-1457.

Motivation:

Through an elegant scientific approach, the paper demonstrates how the Regional Entrepreneurship and Development Index (REDI) can be used to optimize local entrepreneurial discovery processes, in a manner which can support smart specialization strategies (S3). The analysis clearly demonstrates that without optimizing the entrepreneurial ecosystem, the industry specialization alone may not be successful because of the inability of the ecosystem to nurture high growth ventures. With its results, the paper strongly suggests that regional improvement can be achieved by reinforcing the weakest features of the local entrepreneurial ecosystem, an important suggestion for the successful implementation of a smart specialization strategy.

as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2020.

2020

The jury consisting of Janet Kohlhase, Dan Rickman and Jouke van Dijk chose the article:

Quality of government and regional resilience in the European Union. Evidence from the Great Recession, by Roberto Ezcurra and Vicente Riospublished in Volume 98, Issue 3, June 2019, Pages 1267-1290.

Motivation: Through an elegant scientific approach, the paper examines the relationship between quality of government and regional resilience in the European Union during the Great Recession. The results show that the quality of government is an important factor when shaping the regional reaction to the crisis. The analysis clearly deonstates that higher quality of government is associated with greater regional resilience over the Great Recession. The paper gives emphasis to the role played in this context by spatial spillovers induced by the quality of government in neighbouring regions, which turn out to have an important role.

as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2019.

2019

The jury consisting of Janice Madden, Carlos Azzoni and Erik Verhoef chose the articles:

Institutions vs. ‘first-nature’ geography: What drives economic growth in Europe's regions?, by Tobias D. Ketterer and Andrés Rodríguez‐Pose, published in Volume 97, Issue S1, March 2018, Pages S25-S62;

Motivation: Through an elegant scientific approach, the paper aims to investigate whether differences in institutional and ‘first nature’ geographical conditions have affected economic growth in Europe’s regions in the period 1995–2009. The analysis lies on a newly developed dataset including regional quality of government indicators and geographical characteristics, and arrives to the conclusion that regional institutional conditions – and, particularly, government effectiveness and the fight against corruption – play an important role in shaping regional economic growth prospects.

and

The continental divide? Economic exposure to Brexit in regions and countries on both sides of The Channel, by Wen Chen, Bart LosPhilip McCann, Raquel Ortega‐Argilés, Mark Thissen and Frank van Oort, published in Volume 97, Issue 1, Special Issue: The trade, geography and regional implications of Brexit, March 2018, Pages 25-54,

Motivation: The paper tackles an important topic like Brexit, and studies the degree to which EU regions and countries are exposed to negative trade‐related consequences of Brexit. We develop an index of this exposure, which incorporates all effects due to geographically fragmented production processes within the UK, the EU and beyond. The paper demonstrates that UK regions are far more exposed than regions in other countries and that this imbalance may influence the outcomes of the negotiations between the UK and the EU.

as the winners of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2018.

2018

beckman2018The jury consisting of Janice Madden, Carlos Azzoni and Erik Verhoef chose the article "Network proximity in the geography of research collaboration" by Laurent R. Bergé,  published in Volume 94, Issue 4, November 2017, Pages: 785-815 as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2017.

Motivation: Through an elegant scientific approach, the paper replies to the questions of how network proximity influences the structure of inter-regional collaborations and how it interacts with geography. A new, theoretically grounded, measure of inter-regional network proximity is introduced.

The paper achieves interesting results, revealing that inter-regional network proximity is important in determining future collaborations but its effect is mediated by geography. Most importantly, a clear substitution pattern is revealed showing that network proximity mainly benefits international collaborations.

Based on the originality of the interest in the topic, and the important results achieved, the jury concluded that the paper was the best published one in 2017.

2017

beckman2017The jury consisting of Janice Madden, Carlos Azzoni and Erik Verhoef chose the article "Borrowing size in networks of cities: City size, network connectivity and metropolitan functions in Europe" by Evert J. MeijersMartijn J. BurgerMarloes M. Hoogerbrugge,  published in Volume 95, Issue 1, Marh 2016, Pages: 181-198 as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2016.

Motivation: Through an elegant scientific approach, the paper interprets the contrast that exists between the current dynamics in the Western European urban system and the bourgeoning literature stressing the importance of agglomeration for economic growth. The papers argues that rise of ‘city network economies’ leads to processes of borrowed size as well as the rise of agglomeration shadows in networks of cities, and finds that network connectivity positively enhances the presence of metropolitan functions, even if local size remains the most significant determinant for most types of functions. Based on the originality of the interest in the topic, and the important results achieved, the jury concluded that the paper was the best published one in 2016.

2016

The jury consisting of Antoine Bailly, Masahisa Fujita, Roberta Capello and Erik Verhoef  chose the article "Fiscal decentralization and regional disparities: The importance of good governance" by Andreas P. KyriacouLeonel Muinelo-GalloOriol Roca-Sagalés,  published in Volume 94, Issue 1, Marh 2015, Pages: 89-108 as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2015.

Motivation: The paper deals with the measurement of the role of government quality in mediating the relationship between fiscal decentralization and regional disparities. The paper, based on evidence from a sample of 24 OECD countries over the period 1984 to 2006, provides support to the idea that fiscal decentralization has the potential to reduce income differences across regions but that this potential may not be realized because of governance problems associated with sub-national authorities. Based on the originality of the interest in the topic, and the important results achieved, the jury concluded that the paper was the best published one in 2015.

2015

beckman2015The jury consisting of Antoine Bailly, Masahisa Fujita, Roberta Capello and Erik Verhoef  chose the article "The sources of the urban wage premium by worker skills: Spatial sorting or agglomeration economies?" by Martin AnderssonJohan Klaesson and Johan P Larsson published in Volume 93, Issue 4, November 2014, Pages: 727-747 as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2014.

Motivation: The paper deals with the estimate of the respective importance of spatial sorting and agglomeration economies in explaining the urban wage premium for workers with different sets of skills. The paper is an innovative piece of work in the complex field of identifying the sources of differences in wages among cities. It provides empirical evidence on which type of skills are rewarded by density, and bear on the broader question of the contexts in which agglomeration is important. Based on the originality of the methodology used, and the important results achieved, the jury concluded that the paper was the best published one in 2014.

2014

The jury consisting of Masahisa Fujita, Antoine Bailly, Roberta Capello and Erik Verhoef  chose the article "Measuring the effects of European Regional Policy on economic growth: A regression discontinuity approach" by Guido Pellegrini, Flavia Terribile, Ornella Tarola, Teo Muccigrosso and Federica Busillo published in Volume 92, Issue 1, March 2013, Pages: 217-233 as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2013.

Motivation: Based on the originality of the methodology used to develop a very important topic, and the important results achieved, the jury concluded unanimously that the paper was the best published one in 2013. It deals with the the assessment of the Regional Policy effects through a non-experimental comparison group method, the regression discontinuity design, and a novel regional dataset for the 1994–2006 period.The paper is an innovative piece of work in the complex field of regional policy evaluation.

2013

The jury consisting of Masahisa Fujita, Jean Paelinck, Roberta Capello and Jouke van Dijk chose the article "Social networks and regional recruitment of foreign labour: Firm recruitment methods and spatial sorting in Denmark" by Torben Dall Schmidt and Peter Sandholt Jensen published in Volume 91, Issue 4, November 2012, Pages: 795-821 as the winner of the Martin Beckmann Prize as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2012.

Motivation: Based on the criteria a. originality of the topic b. theoretical foundations c. appropriate methodology and d. empirical relevance the jury concluded unanimously that your paper was the best paper. It examines the interesting and complex issue of social networks in regional recruitment and inflows of foreign labor. Using both cross-section analysis and panel data analysis in Denmark, the paper successfully shows the importance of regional social networks and spatial sorting in the recruitment and inflows of foreign labor. The paper is innovative in empirical study on a new and complex issue of international importance.

2012

The jury of the Martin Beckmann Annual Award for 2012 consisting of Jouke van Dijk, Masahisa Fujita, Jean H. Paelinck and John M. Quigley selected for the Martin Beckmann Prize 2012 as clear winner Michael Fritsch and Holger Graffor the paper "How sub-national conditions affect regional innovation systems: The case of the two Germanys", published in Volume 90 Number 2 June 2011 as the best paper published in Papers in Regional Science in 2011.

Motivation: The paper by Fritsch and Graf represents an innovative empirical research on regional innovation systems RIS). In comparison of two RIS in East Germany with two RSI in West Germany, with careful study of characteristics of the inventor networks within and surrounding the four RIS, the paper convincingly demonstrates that an nalysis of RIS should account for the (sub-)national economic conditions as well as for the region's position in its spatial environment.The paper will contribute significantly to the empirical and theoretical study of RIS in the future.

2011

Trade costs in empirical New Economic Geography

Maarten Bosker and Harry Garretsen

Volume 89, Issue 3, August 2010

 

Industrial agglomeration effects in Japan: Productive efficiency, market access, and public fiscal transfer

Akihiro Otsuka, Mika Goto and Toshiyuki Sueyoshi

Volume 89, Issue 4, November 2010

2010

Spatial interaction modelling of cross-region R&D collaborations: Empirical evidence from the 5th EU framework programme

Thomas Scherngell and Michael J. Barber

Volume 88, Issue 3, August 2009

2009

Good governance, trade and agglomeration

Fabien Candau

Volume 87, Issue 4, November 200

2008

Labour force participation rates at the regional and national levels of the European Union: An integrated analysis

J. Paul Elhorst and Annette S. Zeilstra

Volume 86, Issue 4, November 2007

2007

Empirical growth models with spatial effects

Bernie Fingleton and Enrique López-Bazo

Volume 85, Issue 2, June 2006

 

1. Goal

The Award recognizes annually a regional science scholar or scholars who have demonstrated innovation and excellence in Regional Science research through the publication of a paper of outstanding merit in Papers in Regional Science.

2. The Award

2.1 The award is established to recognize and honour the outstanding career and contribution of Professor Martin Beckmann, an internationally recognized regional scientist and economist of outstanding merit, and who is a foundation fellow of the RSAI.

2.2 The Award is made annually for the best paper published in the Issues comprising an annual Volume of Papers in Regional Science.

2.3 Normally no more that one paper may be selected from an annual Volume of Papers in Regional Science, but in exceptional circumstances two (2) papers may be selected for the Award.

2.4 A paper selected for the Award must demonstrate innovation and excellent in research in regional science.

2.5 The Award carries a cash prize of 750 Euros.

3. Jury and Process for Recommending the Award

3.1 In the first quarter of each year, the three (3) Editors of Papers in Regional Science will convene in person and/or by email and /or by teleconference to review the papers published in the Volume of Papers in Regional Science in the previous year and choose a short list of up to five (5) papers which they deem as suitable for consideration for the Martin Beckmann Annual Award for the Best Paper in Papers in Regional Science.

3.2 The Editor-in Chief of Papers in Regional Science will then send the papers for appraisal to a Jury comprising the Editor-in Chief and three (3) Fellows of RSAI chosen by the Editor-in-Chief of Papers in Regional Science in consultation with the RSAI President.

3.3 The Jury will appraise and rank the papers during February that year, and in March a meeting of the Jury will be convened by the Editor-in Chief of papers in Regional Science (meeting in person and/or by email/teleconference) in March to select the paper or papers to receive the Award.

3.4 The Editor-in-Chief of Papers in Regional Science will inform the Executive Director of RSAI of the decision of the Jury, and the Executive Director of RSAI will inform the recipient(s) of the Award.

3.5 The Awardee(s) will be invited to attend one of the Supra-Regional (NARSC, ERSA, PRSCO) meetings or the RSAI World Congress to receive the Award.

About Us

The Regional Science Association International (RSAI), founded in 1954, is an international community of scholars interested in the regional impacts of national or global processes of economic and social change.

Get In Touch

Regional Science Association International
University of Azores, Oficce 155-156, Rua Capitão João D'Ávila, 9700-042 Angra do Heroísmo, Azores, Portugal

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