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Roger Noll

Roger G. Noll is professor emeritus at Stanford University Department of Economics. Noll also is a Senior Fellow and member of the Advisory Board at the American Antitrust Institute.

Noll received a B.S. with honors in mathematics from the California Institute of Technology and a Ph. D. in economics from Harvard University. Prior to coming to Stanford, Noll was a Senior Economist at the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, and Institute Professor of Social Science and Chair of the Division of Humanities and Social Sciences at the California Institute of Technology. He also won a Guggenheim Fellowship, the annual book award of the National Association of Educational Broadcasters, the Rhodes Prize for undergraduate education, the Distinguished Service Award of the Public Utilities Research Center, the Distinguished Lecturer Award by the AEI-Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies, the Alfred E. Kahn Distinguished Career  Award from the American Antitrust Institute, and the Distinguished Member Award of the Transportation and Public Utilities Group of the American Economic Association.

Noll is the author or co-author of fifteen books and over three hundred articles and reviews. Noll’s primary research interests include technology policy; antitrust, regulation and privatization policies in both advanced and developing economies; the economic approach to public law (administrative law, the judiciary, and statutory interpretation); and the economics of sports and entertainment.

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