International Fellows

Charles F. Manski

Northwestern University

Charles F. Manski has been Board of Trustees Professor in Economics at Northwestern University since 1997 and is an International Fellow of cemmap (Centre for Microdata Methods and Practise). He was formerly a member of the faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (1983-98), the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1979-83), and Carnegie Mellon University (1973-80).

Selected Publications

Adaptive partial policy innovation: coping with ambiguity through diversification

This paper develops a broad theme about policy choice under ambiguity through study of a particular […]

Charles F. Manski
22 April 2008 | CWP10/08
Confidence intervals for partially identified parameters

In the last decade a growing body of research has studied inference on partially identified parameters […]

Guido Imbens, Charles F. Manski
1 November 2004 | Journal Article

Previous version

Confidence intervals for partially identified parameters
Guido Imbens, Charles F. Manski
29 May 2003 | CWP09/03
Statistical treatment rules for heterogeneous populations

An important objective of empirical research on treatment response is to provide decision makers with information […]

Charles F. Manski
1 July 2004 | Journal Article

Previous version

Statistical treatment rules for heterogeneous populations
Charles F. Manski
1 May 2003 | CWP03/03
Confidence intervals for partially identified parameters

In the last decade a growing body of research has studied inference on partially identified parameters […]

Guido Imbens, Charles F. Manski
29 May 2003 | CWP09/03

Latest version

Confidence intervals for partially identified parameters
Guido Imbens, Charles F. Manski
1 November 2004 | Journal Article
Statistical treatment rules for heterogeneous populations

An important objective of empirical research on treatment response is to provide decision makers with information […]

Charles F. Manski
1 May 2003 | CWP03/03

Latest version

Statistical treatment rules for heterogeneous populations
Charles F. Manski
1 July 2004 | Journal Article