ALVARO LA PARRA-PEREZ

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS

Alvaro La Parra-Perez


CONTACT


PHONE: 801.648.9775

EMAIL: laparraperez@weber.edu  

OFFICE: WB 242


ABOUT


Alvaro La Parra-Perez earned his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Maryland in 2014 and is currently an associate professor in the Department of Economics at 91¶ÌÊÓƵ.

His fields of interest are economic history, political economy, and institutional economics. His research focuses on the interaction of politics and economics.

He teaches or has taught courses on the Economic History of the United States, Principles of Microeconomics, Economics as a Social Science, Intermediate Microeconomic Theory, and History of Economic Thought. Previously, he also taught American Economic History before the Civil War and Economic History and Modern Development at the University of Maryland.


EDUCATION


Ph.D., Economics - University of Maryland, 2014

M.A., Economics - University of Valencia, Spain, 2008

B.A., Economics - University of Valencia, Spain, 2007

B.A., Economics - University of Nantes, France, 2006


AWARDS


  • Best Paper at European School of New Institutional Economics 2014 (Cargèse, France) for “Fighting Against Democracy. Military Factions during the Second Republic and Spanish Civil War (1931-1939)”
  • 2020 Earl J. Hamilton Prize awarded by the Asociación Española de Historia Económica (Spanish Economic History Association) to the best article published in a non-Spanish journal for the article “For a fistful of pesetas? The political economy of the army in a non-consolidated democracy: the Second Spanish Republic and Civil War (1931–9).”
  • 2022. Presidential Teaching Excellence Award, 91¶ÌÊÓƵ.

HOBBIES


Alvaro is also an avid soccer fan both as player and as spectator. Being a lover of good soccer, he has no option but being a resolute Barcelona supporter.


WEB & SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS



PUBLICATIONS


PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS

  1. “Consensus Among Economists – A Sharpening of the Picture,” with Doris Geide-Stevenson. Journal of Economic Education, forthcoming.
  2. “Recent trends in publications of economic historians in Europe and North America (1980–2019): an empirical analysis,” with Nadia Fernández de Pinedo and Félix Muñoz. Cliometrica, 17(1), 2023 91¶ÌÊÓƵ, pp. 1-22.
  3. “EconHist: A relational database for analyzing the evolution of Economic History (1980-2019),” with Nadia Fernández de Pinedo and Félix Muñoz. Historical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History, 55(1), 2022, pp. 45-60.
  4. “For a Fistful of Pesetas? The Political Economy of Military Factions in a Failed Democracy: the Second Spanish Republic (1931-1939).” The Economic History Review, forthcoming, 2019.
  5. “It Was Personal: Politics and Military Promotions in the Second Spanish Republic (1931–6).” Revista de Historia Económica – Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History, forthcoming, 2019
  6. “Disloyalty and Logics of Fratricide in Civil War: Executions of Officers in Republican Spain, 1936-1939.” With Theodore McLauchlin. Comparative Political Studies, 52(7), June 2019, pp. 1028-1078.
  7. “Spain is Not Different. Institutional Development and the Army in the Second Spanish Republic and Civil War” Revista Universitaria de Historia Militar, 9(5), pp. 52-74, June 2016.