Speakers
Luc Anselin, Arizona State University
Keynote Address: Andy Isserman's Regional Science
Peter Batey, University of Liverpool (U.K)
Integrated Forecasting of Population and Employment: An Historical Perspective
Roger Bolton, Williams College
Habermas and Economists: Two Approaches to Social Capital
David Boyce, Northwestern University
A Memoir for Andrew Isserman
Edward Feser, Manchester School of Business (U.K.),
University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Isserman's Impact: The Use of Quasi-Experimental Research Designs in
Regional
Science
Shelby Gerking, University of Central Florida, Tillburg University (The Netherlands)
Andy Isserman and the Early Years of the International Regional Science Review
Art Getis, San Diego State University
Reflections on Andrew Isserman's Contributions to Economic Base Theory
Geoff Hewings, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Closing Remarks
Tschangho John Kim, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
Science in Urban and Regional Planning
Sarah Low, U.S. Department of Agriculture
Stephan Weiler, Colorado State University
Measurement and story-telling in regional science: An intergenerational perspective on
lessons learned from Andrew Isserman
Noah Isserman, University of Cambridge (U.K)
Ann Markusen, University of Minnesota
Shaping the Future through Narrative with Evidence
Richard Klosterman, University of Akron
New Perspectives on Planning Methods
Dowell Myers, University of Southern California
Hope and Fear in Forecasts to Aid Democratic Decision Making
John Parr, International Regional Science Review
Perspectives on Regional Policy
David Plane, The University of Arizona
The Hoover Index of Population Concentration and the Demographic
Components of
Change: A Paper in Memory of Andy Isserman
Peter Schaeffer, West Virginia University
Beyond the Urban-Rural Divide
Hosted by —
Department of Urban and Regional Planning • The family of Andy Isserman
Sponsored by —
Department of Urban and Regional Planning • Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics
Institute of Government and Public Affairs • Department of Economics