THE PAUL GEROSKI BEST ARTICLE OF THE YEAR PRIZE
In 1983, the first volume of the International Journal of Industrial Organization (IJIO) was published. The IJIO is an international venture that aims at full coverage of theoretical and empirical questions in industrial organization. This includes classic questions of strategic behavior and market structure. The journal also seeks to publish articles dealing with technological change, internal organization of firms, regulation, antitrust and productivity analysis. IJIO recognizes the need to allow for diversity of perspectives and research styles in industrial organization and encourages submissions in theoretical work, empirical work, and case studies. IJIO will also occasionally publish symposia on topical issues, as well as other special issues.
The Editorial Board of the IJIO is pleased to announce that: beginning in 2007, authors of the best two articles published in IJIO during the previous year will win a $1000 prize and an award certificate. The award will be known as "The Paul Geroski Best Article of the Year Prize" in memory of Paul Geroski (Co-Managing Editor of the IJIO, 1987-1992) who passed away in 2005. The winners of the IJIO Geroski Prize are selected annually by the current co-editors, Patrick Bajari, Bernard Caillaud, and Neil Gandal, and are announced in the last journal issue of the year (for articles appearing in the previous year's volume of IJIO).
IJIO 2008 Winners
(announced in 2009)
Lesley Chiou
The timing of movie releases: Evidence from the home video industry
[IJIO 2008, 26(5): 1059-1073]
Robert C. Marshall, Leslie M. Marx, Matthew E. Raiff
Cartel price announcements: The vitamins industry
[IJIO 2008, 26(3): 762-802]
IJIO 2007 Winners
(announced in 2008)
H. R. Varian
Position auctions
[IJIO 2007, 25(6): 1163-1178]
Yi Deng
The effects of patent regime changes: A case study of the European patent office
[IJIO 2007, 25(1): 121-138]
IJIO 2006 Winners
(announced in 2007)
H. Vasconcelos
Endogenous mergers in endogenous sunk cost industries
[IJIO 2006, 24(2): 227-250]
Khwaja, Sloan, & Salm
Evidence on preferences and subjective beliefs of risk-takers: The case of cigarettes
[IJIO 2006, 24(4): 667-682]
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