1-10 items (total 10)
Japan's Industrialization Nurtured by the Wealth of Mountains and Seas|Satoru Nakanishi (Awarded Keio Prize in 2025)
Satoru Nakanishi/Faculty of Economics
Viewing the Economy as a System|Ippei Fujiwara - Awarded Keio Prize in 2024
Ippei Fujiwara/Macroeconomics, International Finance
Creating a "Second Album" to Discuss the Relationship Between Historical Research and the Present | Yusaku Matsuzawa - Awarded Keio Prize in 2023
Yusaku Matsuzawa/Japanese Social History
On Writing "The Economic Theory of Bubbles: Secular Stagnation, Low Interest Rates, and Financial Degradation"|Masaya Sakuragawa - Awarded Keio Prize in 2022
Masaya Sakuragawa/Macroeconomics, International Finance, International Political Economy
Designing the Rules of the Market|Morimitsu Kurino - Awarded Keio Prize in 2021
Morimitsu Kurino/Market Design
On the Need to Strengthen International Collaboration Initiatives|McKenzie, Colin - Awarded Keio Prize in 2020
McKenzie, Colin/Econometrics and Economics of the Family
The Significance of Researching Islamic Art as a Japanese Scholar|Yumiko Kamada - Awarded Keio Prize in 2019
Yumiko Kamada/Art History, particularly Islamic Art History
Learning to acquire the ability to foresee the future and make decisions—something that cannot be replaced by artificial intelligence.|Takahiro Hoshino - Awarded Keio Prize in 2018
Takahiro Hoshino/Econometrics, Behavioral Economics, Marketing Science
A Simple Question Becomes a Life's Work. Scholarship Is a Wonderful Companion for Exploring It.|Sayako Kanda - Awarded Keio Prize in 2017
Sayako Kanda/Asian Economic History, South Asian History
Social Science: Learning from the Past, Assessing the Present, and Creating Options for the Future|Eisaku Ide - Awarded Keio Prize in 2016
Eisaku Ide/Fiscal Sociology