Department of Economics (University of Wisconsin–Madison)

E371637

The Department of Economics at the University of Wisconsin–Madison is a major academic department known for its research and teaching in economic theory, applied economics, and policy analysis at both undergraduate and graduate levels.

All labels observed (1)

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf academic department
economics department
affiliation College of Letters and Science (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
campus University of Wisconsin–Madison
surface form: University of Wisconsin–Madison main campus
country United States of America
educationalLevel graduate
undergraduate
employs administrative staff
economics faculty
research staff
fieldOfWork applied economics
economic theory
economics
policy analysis
hasStudentBody economics graduate students
undergraduate economics majors
hostInstitution economics seminars
public lectures in economics
research workshops
knownFor policy analysis
research in applied economics
research in economic theory
languageOfInstruction English
locatedIn Madison, Wisconsin, United States
surface form: Madison, Wisconsin
mission conducting economic research
informing public policy through economic analysis
teaching economics
offersDegree Bachelor’s degree in economics
Master’s degree in economics
PhD in economics
offersProgram graduate economics program
undergraduate economics program
partOf University of Wisconsin–Madison
researchFocus development economics
econometrics
environmental economics
health economics
industrial organization
international economics
labor economics
macroeconomics
microeconomics
public economics
sector public higher education
websiteLanguage English

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

College of Letters and Science hasAcademicUnit Department of Economics (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
subject surface form: College of Letters and Science (University of Wisconsin–Madison)