Economics and Decision Sciences
               J Braxton Gately
               
               Assistant Professor of Economics
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               Stipes Hall 430K
               
               
                  
                     jb-gately@wiu.edu
                  
               
            
Personal Website:
               Ph.D. Economics, the University of Arkansas, 2021; Economic Experiments on Conflict,
                  
                  Information Acquisition, and Public Goods.
               
            
M.A. Economics, the University of Arkansas, 2018
B.B.A. Economics, Hardin-Simmons University, 2016
               Dr. Gately is a behavioral economist whose research focuses on the factors influencing group
               
               dynamics (such as how people manipulate their beliefs, how different types of people work
               
               together, how groups form, and how group identity impacts decision-making) as well as
               
               property rights and the economics of rural America. He uses primarily experimental methods to
               
               investigate these topics.
            
               
               Dr. Gately is currently responsible for teaching Principles of Microeconomics, and maintains
               
               teaching interests in experimental and behavioral economics, as well as the economics of rural
               
               issues and the history of economic thought. Dr. Gately has worked with undergraduate
               
               students on research both during graduate school and during his postdoc at Baylor University,
               
               and has a passion for working with both undergraduate and graduate students on research
               
               projects. He is a member of the Behavioral Economics and Organization research Group (BEORG).Μύ
            
Selected Research Papers
- βAt Least I Tried: Partial Willful Ignorance, Information Acquisition, and Social Preferences.β (2024). Review of Behavioral Economics.
 
Course Responsibilities
- ECON232 - Principles of Microeconomics
 - ECON332 - Price Theory
 

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