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For the footballer, see Chris Coyne.
Christopher Coyne is an Assistant Professor of Economics at West Virginia University.
[edit] EducationAfter graduating in 1999 with a B.S. from Manhattan College, Coyne received his M.A. (2003) and Ph.D. (2005) in Economics from George Mason University, where he studied with Peter Boettke and Tyler Cowen. [edit] Career in economicsAfter graduating from George Mason University in 2005, Coyne accepted a position as Assistant Professor of Economics at Hampden-Sydney College. In 2007, he left Hampden-Sydney to accept a position as Assistant Professor of Economics at West Virginia University. Besides his position at West Virginia University, Coyne is also the North American Editor of The Review of Austrian Economics, a Research Fellow at the Mercatus Center and at The Independent Institute, a member of the Board of Scholars for the Virginia Institute for Public Policy, and Distinguished Scholar for the Center for the Study of Political Economy at Hampden-Sydney College. In 2008, he was named the Hayek Fellow at the London School of Economics. The Fund for the Study of Spontaneous Orders, which is administered by the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, awarded Coyne its Hayek Prize in 2007 for
[edit] ResearchCoyne has over 60 publications including academic journal articles, book chapters, policy papers, and book reviews. His primary areas of research include Austrian economics, economic development, and political economy. His first book, After War: The Political Economy of Exporting Democracy, was published by Stanford University Press in November 2007 (ISBN 080475439X; paperback ISBN 0804754403). After War employs the tools of economics to analyze the ability of the U.S. to export democracy abroad. The central argument is that continued efforts to export democracy through military occupation and reconstruction are more likely to fail than to succeed due to an array of constraints facing occupiers and policymakers. In the book, Coyne contends that failure is due to the inability of foreign governments to centrally plan the complex array of institutions which underpin liberal democracy. Coyne provides a new vision of U.S. foreign policy including principled nonintervention and a commitment to free trade in goods, ideas and cultural products. He presented his book at The CATO Institute in November 2007.[2] In his review of After War in the Financial Times, Samuel Brittan concluded by noting that,
In, Media, Development, and Institutional Change, (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2009, ISBN 1847204783) Coyne and Peter Leeson investigate mass media's ability to affect institutional change and economic development. They analyze media's role in enabling and inhibiting political-economic reforms that promote development. The book explores how media can constrain government, how governments manipulate media to entrench their power, and how private and public media ownership affects a country's ability to prosper. Coyne and Leeson identify specific media-related policies that governments of underdeveloped countries should adopt if they want to grow. They also illustrate why media freedom is a critical ingredient in the recipe of economic development and why even the best-intentioned state involvement in media is more likely to slow prosperity than to enhance it. [edit] References[edit] External links |
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