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8 - My Research Strategy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2014

Peter Diamond
Affiliation:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Michael Szenberg
Affiliation:
Touro College, New York
Lall Ramrattan
Affiliation:
Pace University, New York
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Summary

A key question for any researcher is what to work on. Integral to answering is the method of search for an idea that might become a good paper. This is particularly an issue for many students starting on their theses, particularly after a period without a successful start. When I talk with these students, I spell out multiple ways of getting started that I have used, rather than presenting a dry, abstract list of approaches. Generally, students coming to me are trying to write theory papers, and it is my experience with getting started on theory papers that I relate in this essay.

A key part of that strategic process, and also of the tactics of completing and presenting papers, is trying to figure out how interesting an actual result or a conjectured result might be. My movements across different research areas and between basic applied theory and policy analyses have taught me the ongoing importance of strategic planning. This essay reports my memory of how I have proceeded strategically over the past fifty years, both before and after recognizing a need to think directly about these choices. Over time I have become aware of the diversity of research approaches that work at different times and for different people and the uneven quality of advice I have given on this issue. So this is one researcher’s story, not one researcher’s advice, a potted history from my memory of early conscious and not conscious choices.

Type
Chapter
Information
Eminent Economists II
Their Life and Work Philosophies
, pp. 111 - 117
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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References

Moscarini, Giuseppe and Wright, Randall, “An Interview with Peter Diamond,” Macroeconomic Dynamics 11, no. 4 (2007): 543–565CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mortensen, Dale, “Specific Capital, Bargaining, and Labor Turnover,” Bell Journal of Economics 9, no. 2 (Autumn 1978): 572–586CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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