Research Program in Political Economy

Off screen link: Skip to content Off screen link: Skip to search
Princeton University
Research Program in Political Economy

Main Menu

  • Home
  • People
    • Faculty
    • Students
  • Events
    • Conferences
    • Political Economy Workshop
    • Pol Econ Research Seminar
    • UPPER Policy Briefs
    • RPPE Visitors Program
    • Calendar
    • Events Archive
      • 2009-2010
      • 2008-2009
      • 2007-2008
      • 2006-2007
  • Grants
  • Courses
  • Policy
  • Log in

Search

Games

  • Morris, Stephen, Hyun Shin, and Muhamet Yildiz. (2016) 2016. “Common Belief Foundations of Global Games”. Journal of Economic Theory 163: - 848. Referenced from search.proquest.com: Common Belief Foundations of Global Games.
    Reference Link
  • Frankel, David, Stephen Morris, and Ady Pauzner. (2003) 2003. “Equilibrium Selection in Global Games With Strategic Complementarities”. Journal of Economic Theory 108 (1): - 44. Referenced from search.proquest.com: Equilibrium Selection in Global Games with Strategic Complementarities.
    Reference Link
  • Baliga, Sandeep, and Stephen Morris. (2002) 2002. “Co-Ordination, Spillovers, and Cheap Talk”. Journal of Economic Theory 105 (2): - 468. Referenced from search.proquest.com: Co-ordination, Spillovers, and Cheap Talk.
    Reference Link
  • Morris, Stephen, V Bhaskar, and George Mailath. (2013) 2013. “A Foundation for Markov Equilibria in Sequential Games With Finite Social Memory”. Review of Economic Studies 80 (3): - 948. Referenced from search.proquest.com: A Foundation for Markov Equilibria in Sequential Games with Finite Social Memory.
    Reference Link
  • Mailath, George, and Stephen Morris. (2006) 2006. “Coordination Failure in Repeated Games With Almost-Public Monitoring”. Theoretical Economics 1 (3): - 340. Referenced from search.proquest.com: Coordination Failure in Repeated Games with Almost-Public Monitoring.
    Reference Link

Footer


Princeton, New Jersey 08544 USA - Operator: (609) 258-3000

Footer menu

  • Department of Politics
  • Department of Economics
  • Princeton School of Public and International Affairs
  • Diversity & Non-Discrimination
  • Accessibility Help

© 2025 The Trustees of Princeton University

Princeton University