Economist Kirk Doran wins UK’s Panmure House Prize honoring interdisciplinary research
Kirk Doran, an associate professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Notre Dame, has won the 2024 Adam Smith Panmure House Prize.
Established in 2021, the prize is named after the forefather of economics and celebrates those who embody his empiricism and long-term interdisciplinary thinking in their research. One of the United Kingdom’s largest academic prizes open to researchers globally, it has been awarded to emerging academic leaders across multiple disciplines, including a business academic, a neurologist and an anthropologist.
“I feel honored and privileged to win the Panmure House Prize. Adam Smith has been an inspiration to me since the first time I began studying social structures and the economy as an undergraduate,” Doran said. “I am particularly inspired by the prize’s aim to explore the relationship between long-term thinking and radical innovation. This is exactly what our current incentive structures both within and outside academia under-incentivize, and that is why Panmure House’s work is so essential here.”
Like Smith, Doran asks fundamental questions that are often hard to find a definitive answer to because they are so overarching. In his research, Doran seeks to identify where and how new knowledge is created in order to ultimately find the cause of long-term per capita economic growth.
Through his subfield of innovation economics, Doran aims to use techniques developed by modern labor economists to answer questions that had been long debated without progress until these techniques were developed. He has applied empirical tactics to measure knowledge generation through bibliometric analysis of interdisciplinary databases — such as papers, patents and medical trials.
His studies find that the development of new knowledge is ultimately based on collaborative relationships in which people inspire and challenge one another.
“We are delighted to see Kirk Doran’s research receive this international recognition,” said John T. McGreevy, the Charles and Jill Fischer Provost. “The Panmure House Prize’s emphasis on long-term, interdisciplinary thinking mirrors the University of Notre Dame’s commitment to scholarly innovation and excellence across the disciplines.”
Doran was one of four finalists from leading global institutions to be considered for the Panmure House Prize. He was supported in pursuing the award by the Office of the Provost and the College of Arts and Letters’ Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts.
With this recognition, Doran plans to continue examining how new knowledge impacts per capita economic growth with a multidisciplinary team. He hopes it will have a policy impact that can benefit productivity.
“I think my research will help to refocus our policy efforts regarding long-term economic growth to the encouragement of deep collaboration among innovative people,” he said. “It is not enough to better educate our workforce or even produce more entrepreneurs, scientists and inventors; such efforts could not possibly produce long-run economic growth unless these individuals enter periods of deep collaboration with each other in the joint production of knowledge.”
Originally published by al.nd.edu on Oct. 7.
atContact: Tracy DeStazio, associate director of media relations, 574-631-9958 or tdestazi@nd.edu
Latest ND News Wire
- In memoriam: Frank H. Collins, professor emeritus in the Department of Biological SciencesFrank Hadley Collins, professor emeritus in the College of Science at the University of Notre Dame, died Nov. 16 in Tucson, Arizona. He was 80.
- Panel explores pathways to peaceful co-existence in the Middle EastPeacebuilding activists Nidal Foqaha, Tehila Wenger and Ezzeldeen Masri joined the University of Notre Dame’s Lisa Schirch on Nov. 11 for a discussion in DeBartolo Hall about how to resolve the ongoing conflict between Israelis and Palestinians in a way that provides peace, security and equal rights for all people living in the region. The event was the second in the Israel-Palestine Series of the 2024-25 Notre Dame Forum on “What Do We Owe Each Other?”
- Mendoza College of Business, Athletics team up to empower student-athletes as leadersThe one-of-a-kind partnership enables Mendoza and Notre Dame Athletics to collaborate in new ways to help student-athletes fully realize their leadership potential through greater awareness of career pathways in business.
- ‘Show kindness and compassion’: In Fr. TED Talks, Notre Dame community explores what we owe each otherLast Monday and Tuesday evenings (Oct. 28 and 29), hundreds gathered under a tent on the Library Lawn to attend a Notre Dame Forum event titled “Fr. TED Talks: Ideas from the Catholic Social Tradition That We Find Inspiring.” The event featured a series of eight speakers from the Notre Dame community, culminating in a talk by University President Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C.
- Gov. Ron DeSantis to deliver Center for Citizenship and Constitutional Government lectureGov. Ronald D. DeSantis, the 46th governor of Florida, will speak at the University of Notre Dame at 4 p.m. Nov. 8 in Room 101 of DeBartolo Hall. Sponsored by Notre Dame’s Center for Citizenship and Constitutional Government, the talk will serve as the center’s 2024 Jeanie Poole O’Shaughnessy Memorial Lecture.
- Arun Agrawal to lead Notre Dame’s new University-wide sustainability initiativeArun Agrawal, a renowned scholar of environmental politics and sustainable development, will join the University of Notre Dame on Jan. 1, 2025, as the inaugural director of the Just Transformations to Sustainability Initiative, a key priority in the University’s strategic framework.