Carmine Guerriero
Carmine Guerriero[1] (Avellino, 6 June 1979) is an Italian economist whose main contributions are towards the understanding of the determinants of legal, regulatory, and political institutions (endogenous institutions theory).
Education and professional life
Born in Avellino, Italy, Guerriero obtained his BA in economics from Bocconi University in 2002, his MA in Economics from the University of Chicago in 2004, his MSc in Economics from LSE in 2005, and his PhD in Economics from the University of Cambridge in 2010.
From 2009 to 2015 he has been Assistant Professor and Fellow of law and economics at the ACLE[2] (University of Amsterdam) and is now Assistant Professor of Economics (RTDb) at the University of Bologna. Between 2009 and 2016, he has visited Bocconi, EIEF, and LUISS.
Guerriero is associate editor of the International Review of Law and Economics (from 2012 on) and Co-Primary Investigator of the Nomography Project (from 2014 on). Furthermore, he has received the EARIE Paul Geroski award in 2007 and the Hans-Jurgen-Ewer prize in 2011
He has published in renowned journals as the Journal of Comparative Economics and the Journal of Law and Economics, and he is most known for his work on:
- endogenous legal traditions (a criticism to the legal origins literature based on the fact that legal systems evolve due to forces also affecting the economic outcomes that economists want to explain through legal variation);
- property rights;
- market design;
- the determinants and effects of a culture of cooperation and inclusive political institutions.
Selected publications
- "Accountability in Government and Regulatory Policies: Theory and Evidence.'' Journal of Comparative Economics, 39 (2011): 453-469.
- "Endogenous Legal Traditions.'' International Review of Law and Economics, 46 (2016): 49-69.
- "Endogenous Legal Traditions and Economic Outcomes.'' Journal of Comparative Economics, 44 (2016): 416-433.
- "Endogenous Property Rights.'' Journal of Law and Economics, 59 (2016): 313-358.
- "Endogenous (In)Formal Institutions'' (with: Serra Boranbay, Carnegie Mellon University). ACLE Working Paper No. 2012-04.