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TREESPEAR

Think-tank for Resources, Energy, and the Environment:
Science and Policy-related Economic Analysis and Research



Cornell University



Irvin Rojas presented at Oxford University


Cornell University TREESPEAR Graduate Research Associate Rubén Irvin Rojas Valdés presented his research at the Oxford Symposium on Population, Migration, and the Environment at Oxford University. He was awarded a grant from the University of California Institute for Mexico and the United States (UC MEXUS) to attend and present at this prestigious symposium.

For his research, Irvin is studying migration decisions of rural households in Mexico. Given the economic significance of migration and its relevance for policy, it is important to understand the factors that cause people to migrate. Irvin is developing and estimating a structural econometric model of the dynamic and strategic decisions of households regarding migration decisions in rural Mexico. In particular, he is modeling and estimating their decisions as a dynamic game between households within a village. The structural econometric model he is developing is sophisticated and at the frontier of the literature. He is using this model to simulate the effects of counterfactual policy scenarios, including those regarding wages, schooling, crime rates at the border, precipitation, and government policy, on migration decisions and welfare.

Irvin's structural econometric model of dynamic and strategic decision-making enables him to answer the following questions. First, how do natural factors, economic factors, government policies, and neighborhood effects affect the strategic and dynamic decision-making behavior of households in rural Mexico? Second, how do different institutions and policies affect this behavior and its outcome? Third, how should we design institutions and policies so that the decision-making behavior and outcome that are realized increase social welfare?

In addition to Oxford University, Irvin has presented his research as an invited seminar speaker in the Economics Department at the University of San Francisco; at the Latin American Meeting of the Econometric Society (LAMES); at Cornell University; at the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association (AAEA) Annual Meeting; at the Pacific Conference for Development Economics; at the Midwest International Economic Development Conference; at the North East Universities Development Consortium Conference (NEUDC); at the University of California at Davis; and at the CIRET International Conference on Migration and Welfare in Rome.

Irvin has won several prestigious awards for his research, including the UC-Davis Graduate Student Travel Award; the Gifford Center Travel Award; the Henry A. Jastro Graduate Research Award; the Blum Center for Developing Economics Poverty Alleviation through Sustainable Solutions (PASS) Project Grant; a grant from the University of California Institute for Mexico and the United States (UC MEXUS); and the UC-Davis Fellowship for Excellence in Graduate Research. He was one of only a few Ph.D. students worldwide entering the job market this Fall 2017 who were selected for the 2017 Western Economic Association International Graduate Student Dissertation Workshop.


For further reading:

  • Rojas Valdés, Rubén Irvin, C.-Y. Cynthia Lin Lawell, and J. Edward Taylor. (2023). Migration dynamics, strategy, and policy. Working paper, Cornell University.
    [Working paper]
  • Rojas Valdés, Rubén Irvin, C.-Y. Cynthia Lin Lawell, and J. Edward Taylor. (2023). Neighborhood effects in migration. Working paper, Cornell University.
    [Working paper]
  • Rojas Valdés, Rubén Irvin, C.-Y. Cynthia Lin Lawell, and J. Edward Taylor. (2018). Migration in rural Mexico: Strategic interactions, dynamic behavior, and the environment. Journal of Academic Perspectives, 2017 (3).
    [Manuscript] [Published paper]
  • Rojas Valdés, Rubén Irvin, C.-Y. Cynthia Lin Lawell, and J. Edward Taylor. (2023). The economics of migration and migration policy in rural Mexico. Working paper, Cornell University.
    [Working paper]