Göttingen School of Development Economics Network

We would like to invite our colleagues to join the Göttingen School of Development Economics Network. Are you interested in a unique opportunity to connect with a like-minded community, get in touch with your old friends, and meet new friends on the way?

Then join the Göttingen School of Development Economics Network by simply signing up for our mailing list. Signing up for the mailing list comes with no obligations and will keep you posted about the following events and activities of our network:

Second Homecoming event: You will be invited to join us for the second Homecoming of the Göttingen School of Development Economics on September 27-28, 2024. Please save the date and check our website!

Professional networking opportunities: As a member of our network, we will provide you access to a large network of development economists who share your interests and career goals.

Get in touch with our members: We aim to create an alumni platform to share job opportunities, provide referrals, and offer mentorship or advice.

The goal is to create a network of like-minded individuals who share the passion for development economics and a common Göttingen background. It would be a great pleasure for us if you would join!


In Memory of Professor Stephan Klasen

Professor Stephan Klasen, Ph.D., holder of the Chair of Development Economics and Director of the Ibero-American Institute for Economic Research since 2003, died on October 27, 2020 at the age of 54 after a long and serious illness.


Stephan Klasen shaped his field, development economics, like no other in Germany and Europe. The emergence of modern development economics in Germany since the early 2000s is largely due to his commitment and work. By establishing diverse and cross-faculty cooperation and networks, he has significantly expanded development economics in Götttingen and enabled cross-disciplinary research. Today, Göttingen is Germany's largest and internationally most visible location for research on developing countries. Unfortunately, we are losing our esteemed colleague, who was full of energy and ideas and was committed to the interests of his students, doctoral candidates and staff until the end, much too early. We will miss him. The Faculty of Economics and Business Administration will honor his memory. Our deepest sympathy goes to his wife and his four children.


CV

Obituary of the Faculty of Economics


"A special and extremely committed person" - farewell lecture by development economist Prof. Stephan Klasen, Ph.D.

After his farewell lecture on 16 November 2019 in the Alfred-Hessel-Saal of the Paulinerkirche, more than 250 guests from all over the world honoured Prof. Dr. h.c. Stephan Klasen, Ph.D. with long-lasting applause. Stephan Klasen has been Professor of Development Economics since 2003. He conducts research on issues of poverty, inequality, the environment and gender in developing countries. Born in 1966, he retires prematurely because he has been suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) since 2015 and is severely restricted in language and mobility.


In their speeches, Prof. Dr. Hiltraud Casper-Hehne, Vice-President for International Affairs at the University of Göttingen, and Prof. Dr. Thomas Kneib, Dean of the Faculty of Business and Economics, emphasized, among other things, Klasens' great merits for Göttingen's development economy. "You are a special and extremely committed person," emphasised Prof. Casper-Hehne in her speech.


Stephan Klasen has significantly expanded development economics in Göttingen and made interdisciplinary research in this field possible by establishing diverse and inter-faculty cooperation and networks. Today, Göttingen is Germany's largest and most internationally visible location for developing country research. Together with scientists from agricultural economics and stochastics, he founded for example the Courant Research Center "Poverty, Equity, and Growth in Developing and Transition Countries" with funds from the second round of the Excellence Initiative of 2007. In addition, he works closely with agricultural economists in the Collaborative Research Centre "Ecological and socio-economic functions of tropical lowland rainforest transformation systems (Sumatra, Indonesia)" funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and in the DFG Research Training Group "Transformation of Global Agri-Food Systems - Global Food". Together with researchers from the University of Hanover, Stephan Klasen has also acquired the DFG Research Training Group "Globalization and Development". And these are just a few examples of his diverse research activities.


In his speech, Prof. Dr. Andrea Cornia, development economist at the Department of Economics and Management at the University of Florence, spoke about Prof. Klasen's academic career and research focus. For example, he paid particular tribute to Klasen for publishing many scientific papers together with young scientists: "He has the ability to arouse interest in development economics research. This is how you create a school," he said with reference to the so-called "Göttingen Schule" (Göttingen School). Professor Klasen's doctoral students coined this term at a symposium on the occasion of his 50th birthday.


The "Göttingen Schule" and the Stephan Klasen Fellowship

Prof. Dr. Isabel Günther then spoke of this "Göttingen Schule". The former research assistant and doctoral student of Stephan Klasen is now Professor of Development Economics and Director of the NADEL - Center for Development and Cooperation at ETH Zurich. She described Klasen as an "inspiring teacher" who always accompanied and supported his doctoral students very individually. Stephan Klasen has supervised a total of 76 doctorates as a first supervisor. In addition, he created one of the first junior professorships at the Faculty of Business and Economics. His current research assistants thanked Prof. Klasen with a scientific contribution of a special kind: in the run-up to the event, they had interviewed the participants with the help of a questionnaire on various aspects, from personal details such as their own zodiac sign to joint visits to the cafeteria with Stephan Klasen, and then evaluated these data in a humorous manner and summarised them in a paper.


As a sign of his great commitment to young scientists, the Development Economics Professorships of the Faculty, together with the Executive Board of the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen and the Faculty of Business and Economics, have also launched the "Stephan Klasen Fellowship". Beginning 2021, two postdoctoral students will be invited to Göttingen for one year each for academic exchange.


Video recording of the event:


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Finally, Luke Barr, Sean Gullette, Lukas and Nicolas Klasen as well as Albert Wenger read the text of Prof. Klasen's farewell lecture, which provided a review of his academic career and his work in research, teaching and political consulting. You can download the complete text here.


The event was accompanied by music by Amy and Henning Bloech.


Development Economics Conference - Göttinger Schule



From June 23rd - 24th more than 150 development economists from all over the world gathered in Göttingen to celebrate the 50th birthday of Professor Dr. Stephan Klasen. The celebration was a two-day conference that covered a broad range of topics in development economics such as gender, education, and agriculture. All of Klasen's former and current PhD students, collaborators, and friends were invited to participate. Nobel prize winner Amartya Sen, was the keynote speaker at the birthday celebration and honoured Stephan Klasen's contributions to development economics, in particular his strides in gender inequality. Sen, Klasen's doctoral supervisor, referred to Klasen as the "leading expert on missing women" and a "brilliant mind." He also offered the opportunity for more than a hundred development economics students from the University of Göttingen to participate in a question and answer period. Find a long programme here and a short programme here.

Keynote Lecture of Amartya Sen [→]

Speech by Amartya Sen and subsequent discussion:




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