iPhone上面那个未名空间app不能回复# Apple - 家有苹果
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【 以下文字转载自 Returnee 讨论区 】
发信人: bixu1 (2-39), 信区: Returnee
标 题: 苏东蔚是美国罪犯偷窃信用卡大于十万美元,他回国当暨南大学金融学教授、博导和 校特聘教授,系主任。
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Sat Apr 2 10:05:19 2011, 美东)
苏冬蔚
http://jpkc.jnu.edu.cn/2010/gsjr/smallclass.asp?bigclassname=%B
http://finance.jnu.edu.cn/show.php?contentid=53
简历
1970年12月 生于福建厦门
1992年7月 厦门大学经济学学士
1993年9月 美国俄亥俄州立大学经济学硕士
1997年6月 美国俄亥俄州立大学经济学博士
1997年8月 美国艾克隆大学经济系助理教授
2001年8月 美国摩根州立大学金融系助理教授
2002年7月起 暨南大学金融学教授、博导和校特聘教授
2003年11月 入选教育部优秀青年教师资助计划
2004年3月 获霍英东教育基金会高校青年教师奖励基金
2004年6月 广东省高校“千百十工程”省级学科带头人
目前主持国家自然科学基金、广东省自然科学基金和
教育部人文社科基金等项目的研究工作,为暨南大学
国家“211工程”重点建设项目“产业经济学与金融
经济学”的学术带头人之一。
苏东蔚的犯罪记录:
http://12.100.23.254:8080/bj/news/2001/June/20/docs/004953.htm
Published Wednesday, June 20, 2001, in the Akron Beacon Journal.
Ex-UA professor gets jail sentence
Native of China given maximum 16-month term for identity theft
BY KATIE BYARD
Beacon Journal staff writer
CLEVELAND: At the University of Akron, he taught economics.
Outside the classroom, professor Dongwei Su practiced a criminal form of
supply and demand.
When his demand for goods outstripped his supply of money, he stole the
identities of others, got credit cards in their names and racked up credit
card bills of more than $100,000 to finance a lavish lifestyle.
Yesterday, U.S. District Judge Patricia Anne Gaughan told the 30-year-old
native of China that his actions were ``particularly deplorable, given all
the advantages you have had in this country.''
Sentencing Su to the maximum 16 months in federal prison, Gaughan told the
former UA professor that she agreed with federal attorneys who said that he
was motivated by ``pure, unadulterated greed.''
Su will serve the next 11 months in prison because he was given credit for
the five months of jail time he has served following his indictment earlier
this year.
In January, a federal grand jury returned a 14-count indictment against Su.
He was arrested and detained without bond.
In late April, Su pleaded guilty to mail fraud and credit card related
charges. Su admitted using the identity information of five people --
including people he had met while studying at Ohio State University -- to
obtain credit cards. Federal prosecutors have said Su used credit cards to
buy plane tickets, furniture and other items.
Su, a Chinese citizen, now faces deportation to his homeland.
Wearing navy blue prison garb and unshackled from handcuffs that he wore
when he was escorted into court, Su told the judge: ``I feel very sorry for
the crime that I have committed. I feel very sorry.''
Defense attorney Michael Lear argued in the Cleveland courtroom for a lesser
sentence. He pointed out that once Su finishes serving this sentence, he
will be detained by the Immigration and Naturalization Service until a
deportation hearing can be scheduled.
Lear also asked the judge to consider Su's youth. Lear said Su was in his
early 20s when he began stealing identities.
``He essentially stopped in 1999,'' Lear said.
Lear said Su has ``accepted responsibility'' for his actions and has ``
agreed that greed led him to these actions. . . . Greed got to him and
consumed him.''
Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Jackson, however, told the judge Su began to
express remorse for his actions only ``after he was caught.''
Jackson said after the sentencing that Su's credit ``had been ruined, or at
least was not good,'' by the early 1990s. So Su started using other people's
names and Social Security numbers.
``He knew the ramifications of what bad credit does to you,'' Jackson said.
``Instead of paying on it, or taking care of it himself, he went and stole
other people's identities.''
Su did manage to gradually pay off nearly two-thirds of the $114,241.74 he
racked up in debt using the credit cards he fraudulently obtained.
He still owes $40,544 and Judge Gaughan ordered him to pay that amount in
restitution. She said that after he serves his time in prison, he must make
monthly payments on that debt.
Postal inspectors began investigating Su's use of credit cards last year,
when a former graduate student from Ohio State said credit companies began
pestering him about more than $39,000 in purchases in the Columbus and Akron
areas. The student said he had not made the purchases and helped lead
authorities to Su.
Su also used the identities of two other people he met while studying at
Ohio State University, federal prosecutors have said.
Su continued his credit card scam after he moved to Northeast Ohio in 1997
to begin work as an assistant professor of economics at UA, prosecutors have
said.
They said that after buying a house in Green in 1998, Su received a credit
card solicitation for a person who had earlier lived at the address. Su used
the card to buy more than $10,000 in items, prosecutors said. Su also used
identity information of a neighbor in Green to obtain another card.
At UA, Su was making about $50,000 a year. He resigned in May after being
placed on administrative leave without pay.
Lear, Su's attorney, said yesterday that Su recently was hired as an
assistant professor of economics at Morgan State University in Baltimore.
Obviously, Su will not be able to take the job, Lear said.
Katie Byard can be reached at 330-996-3781 or k****[email protected]
Published Wednesday, June 20, 2001, in the Akron Beacon Journal.
Ex-UA professor gets jail sentence
Native of China given maximum 16-month term for identity theft
BY KATIE BYARD
Beacon Journal staff writer
CLEVELAND: At the University of Akron, he taught economics.
Outside the classroom, professor Dongwei Su practiced a criminal xxxx of
supply and demand. When his demand for goods outstripped his supply of money
, he stole the identities of others, got credit cards in their names and
racked up credit card bills of more than $100,000 to finance a lavish
lifestyle.
Yesterday, U.S. District Judge Patricia Anne Gaughan told the 30-year-old
native of China that his actions were ``particularly deplorable, given all
the advantages you have had in this country. Sentencing Su to the maximum 16
months in federal prison, Gaughan told the xxxxer UA professor that she
agreed with federal attorneys who said that he was motivated by ``pure,
unadulterated greed.
Su will serve the next 11 months in prison because he was given credit for
the five months of jail time he has served following his indictment earlier
this year. In January, a federal grand jury returned a 14-count indictment
against Su. He was arrested and detained without bond.
In late April, Su pleaded guilty to mail fraud and credit card related
charges . Su admitted using the identity inxxxxation of five people
including people he had met while studying at Ohio State University to
obtain credit cards. Federal prosecutors have said Su used credit cards to
buy plane tickets , furniture and other items.
Su, a Chinese citizen, now faces deportation to his homeland.
Wearing navy blue prison garb and unshackled from handcuffs that he wore
when he was escorted into court, Su told the judge: ``I feel very sorry for
the crime that I have committed. I feel very sorry.
Defense attorney Michael Lear argued in the Cleveland courtroom for a lesser
sentence. He pointed out that once Su finishes serving this sentence, he
will be detained by the Immigration and Naturalization Service until a
deportation hearing can be scheduled. Lear also asked the judge to consider
Su s youth. Lear said Su was in his early 20s when he began stealing
identities.
``He essentially stopped in 1999, Lear said.
Lear said Su has ``accepted responsibility for his actions and has ``agreed
that greed led him to these actions. . . . Greed got to him and consumed him.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Jackson, however, told the judge Su began to
express remorse for his actions only ``after he was caught. Jackson said
after the sentencing that Su s credit ``had been ruined, or at least was not
good, by the early 1990s. So Su started using other people s names and
Social Security numbers. ``He knew the ramifications of what bad credit does
to you, Jackson said. `` Instead of paying on it, or taking care of it
himself, he went and stole other people s identities.
Su did manage to gradually pay off nearly two-thirds of the $114,241.74 he
racked up in debt using the credit cards he fraudulently obtained. He still
owes $40,544 and Judge Gaughan ordered him to pay that amount in restitution
. She said that after he serves his time in prison, he must make monthly
payments on that debt.
Postal inspectors began investigating Su s use of credit cards last year,
when a xxxxer graduate student from Ohio State said credit companies began
pestering him about more than $39,000 in purchases in the Columbus and Akron
areas. The student said he had not made the purchases and helped lead
authorities to Su.
Su also used the identities of two other people he met while studying at
Ohio State University, federal prosecutors have said. Su continued his
credit card scam after he moved to Northeast Ohio in 1997 to begin work as
an assistant professor of economics at UA, prosecutors have said.
They said that after buying a house in Green in 1998, Su received a credit
card solicitation for a person who had earlier lived at the address. Su used
the card to buy more than $10,000 in items, prosecutors said. Su also used
identity inxxxxation of a neighbor in Green to obtain another card. At UA,
Su was making about $50,000 a year. He resigned in May after being placed on
administrative leave without pay.
Lear, Su s attorney, said yesterday that Su recently was hired as an
assistant professor of economics at Morgan State University in Baltimore.
Obviously, Su will not be able to take the job, Lear said.
http://www.edu.cn/20031204/3095391.shtml
教育部公布2003年度“优秀青年教师资助计划”资助人选名单
78 苏冬蔚 暨南大学 经济学 我国上市公司可持续发展的计量模型与经验分析
http://pgsu.jnu.edu.cn/autonews/show.aspx?id=109&cid=8
经济学院研究生会邀请苏冬蔚教授做学术讲座 - 暨南大学研究生组织
10 月21日晚上七点,美国俄亥俄州立大学博士、暨大特聘一级教授、暨大微观金融研
究中心主任苏冬蔚教授接受经济学院研究生会邀请,在该学院401教室做了题为“金融
经济学的历史与未来”的经济、金融前沿课题讲座。苏冬蔚教授用了两个多小时为研究
生们深入浅出地介绍了金融经济学学科的十四个重要的里程碑及前沿动态,虽然苏教授
年仅30出头,但扎实的理论基础和多年在美国从事金融经济学的教学研究背景,使他谈
起金融经济学的发展历史时如数家珍,感触良多。这次讲座得到经济学院研究生们的积
极参与,拥有数百座位的教室座无虚席,很多学生加座或站着听苏教授精彩的讲评。活
动后,研究生们普遍反映该次讲座不仅使他们对金融经济学的历史和前沿动态有了一个
全面的了解,而且苏教授在串讲过程中的一些点评也启发了他们新的研究思路和研究方
法,让他们获益匪浅。
http://ec.jnu.edu.cn/runchun/news_show/news_show.asp?newsid=528
苏冬蔚老师获2005年度国家自然科学基金项目
作者:[学院教科办] 加入时间:[2005-10-26 15:06:11]
近日获悉,我院金融系苏冬蔚教授获2005年度国家自然科学基金一项,立项课题为“我
国上市公司多元化经营与内部资本市场效率的理论与实证研究”,资助金额 16万。此
前,我院已获国家社科项目2项,分别是经济系李郁芳教授的“政府行为外部性的经济
分析”,资助6.5万元;财税系冯海波博士的“税费改革后农村基层组织运行和公益事
业问题研究”(青年项目),资助6万元。
今年我院教师踊跃申报国家级课题,尤其是青年教师积极性非常高。但从总体看获得的
项目数并不太理想。除客观因素外,我们应更多地从主观因素去找原因,例如申报书的
规范填写、人员的配备、研究范围大小与条件等等。希望没有拿到项目的老师不要气馁
,再接再厉,在此基础上将申报书作进一步的完善,并可考虑向团队项目发展。
http://www.paper.edu.cn/scholar/paper.jsp?name=sudongwei
苏冬蔚专栏
苏冬蔚,男,1970年12月出生于福建厦门,于1992年7月毕业于厦门大学经济系,1997
年6月获美国俄亥俄州立大学(The Ohio State
University)经济学博士学位,1997年8月至2002年5月在美国大学担任经济学和金融学
助理教授,2002年9月被暨南大学聘为金融学教授、博士生导师和校特聘教授,主要学
术兼职包括暨南大学微观金融研究中心主任、美国Sandra Ann Morsilli亚太金融市场
研究中心客座研究员和澳门科技大学长期访问教授。主要研究方向为微观金融理论与实
证(含投资学、公司金融和市场微观结构)。苏教授是最早将我国证券市场和上市公司
研究推向国际学术界的学者,如在1998年Journal of Economics and Business的一篇
论文中运用GARCH模型分析信息结构、政策因素和交易制度对我国股市风险与收益的影
响,首次用规范的研究方法论证我国股市为“政策市”,在1999年Pacific-Basin
Finance Journal的一篇论文中首次系统研究上市公司原始股折价的原因,后者获美国
Sandra Ann Morsilli亚太金融市场研究中心和泰国股票交易所国际杰出研究奖并已被
Review of Economics and Statistics和Journal of Corporate Finance等SSCI期刊多
次引用,于2003年出版的《中国股票市场研究》(世界科学出版社)被美国经济学会誉
为是“对中国证券市场研究最完整的专著”(2003年Journal of Economic Literature
41, p.1200),同时,被英国皇家经济学会Steven Green教授誉为是“第一本运用规
范的金融理论和实证方法系统分析中国股市的(英文)学术专著”(2003年
International Affairs 79, p.683)。另外,在《经济研究》、《数量经济技术经济
研究》、Financial Review、China Economic Review和Journal of International
Financial Markets, Institutions & Money等重要的国内外学术期刊上发表论文20篇
。曾任中国留美金融学会理事和总编辑,多次为美国国家科学基金会、香港大学资助局
、国家自然科学基金会和国家哲学社会科学基金会评审课题,为国内外重要的金融和经
济学术刊物评审文章,并多次应邀在美国经济学会、美国财务管理学会和亚太金融学会
等著名国际学术会议上宣读论文。
发信人: bixu1 (2-39), 信区: Returnee
标 题: 苏东蔚是美国罪犯偷窃信用卡大于十万美元,他回国当暨南大学金融学教授、博导和 校特聘教授,系主任。
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Sat Apr 2 10:05:19 2011, 美东)
苏冬蔚
http://jpkc.jnu.edu.cn/2010/gsjr/smallclass.asp?bigclassname=%B
http://finance.jnu.edu.cn/show.php?contentid=53
简历
1970年12月 生于福建厦门
1992年7月 厦门大学经济学学士
1993年9月 美国俄亥俄州立大学经济学硕士
1997年6月 美国俄亥俄州立大学经济学博士
1997年8月 美国艾克隆大学经济系助理教授
2001年8月 美国摩根州立大学金融系助理教授
2002年7月起 暨南大学金融学教授、博导和校特聘教授
2003年11月 入选教育部优秀青年教师资助计划
2004年3月 获霍英东教育基金会高校青年教师奖励基金
2004年6月 广东省高校“千百十工程”省级学科带头人
目前主持国家自然科学基金、广东省自然科学基金和
教育部人文社科基金等项目的研究工作,为暨南大学
国家“211工程”重点建设项目“产业经济学与金融
经济学”的学术带头人之一。
苏东蔚的犯罪记录:
http://12.100.23.254:8080/bj/news/2001/June/20/docs/004953.htm
Published Wednesday, June 20, 2001, in the Akron Beacon Journal.
Ex-UA professor gets jail sentence
Native of China given maximum 16-month term for identity theft
BY KATIE BYARD
Beacon Journal staff writer
CLEVELAND: At the University of Akron, he taught economics.
Outside the classroom, professor Dongwei Su practiced a criminal form of
supply and demand.
When his demand for goods outstripped his supply of money, he stole the
identities of others, got credit cards in their names and racked up credit
card bills of more than $100,000 to finance a lavish lifestyle.
Yesterday, U.S. District Judge Patricia Anne Gaughan told the 30-year-old
native of China that his actions were ``particularly deplorable, given all
the advantages you have had in this country.''
Sentencing Su to the maximum 16 months in federal prison, Gaughan told the
former UA professor that she agreed with federal attorneys who said that he
was motivated by ``pure, unadulterated greed.''
Su will serve the next 11 months in prison because he was given credit for
the five months of jail time he has served following his indictment earlier
this year.
In January, a federal grand jury returned a 14-count indictment against Su.
He was arrested and detained without bond.
In late April, Su pleaded guilty to mail fraud and credit card related
charges. Su admitted using the identity information of five people --
including people he had met while studying at Ohio State University -- to
obtain credit cards. Federal prosecutors have said Su used credit cards to
buy plane tickets, furniture and other items.
Su, a Chinese citizen, now faces deportation to his homeland.
Wearing navy blue prison garb and unshackled from handcuffs that he wore
when he was escorted into court, Su told the judge: ``I feel very sorry for
the crime that I have committed. I feel very sorry.''
Defense attorney Michael Lear argued in the Cleveland courtroom for a lesser
sentence. He pointed out that once Su finishes serving this sentence, he
will be detained by the Immigration and Naturalization Service until a
deportation hearing can be scheduled.
Lear also asked the judge to consider Su's youth. Lear said Su was in his
early 20s when he began stealing identities.
``He essentially stopped in 1999,'' Lear said.
Lear said Su has ``accepted responsibility'' for his actions and has ``
agreed that greed led him to these actions. . . . Greed got to him and
consumed him.''
Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Jackson, however, told the judge Su began to
express remorse for his actions only ``after he was caught.''
Jackson said after the sentencing that Su's credit ``had been ruined, or at
least was not good,'' by the early 1990s. So Su started using other people's
names and Social Security numbers.
``He knew the ramifications of what bad credit does to you,'' Jackson said.
``Instead of paying on it, or taking care of it himself, he went and stole
other people's identities.''
Su did manage to gradually pay off nearly two-thirds of the $114,241.74 he
racked up in debt using the credit cards he fraudulently obtained.
He still owes $40,544 and Judge Gaughan ordered him to pay that amount in
restitution. She said that after he serves his time in prison, he must make
monthly payments on that debt.
Postal inspectors began investigating Su's use of credit cards last year,
when a former graduate student from Ohio State said credit companies began
pestering him about more than $39,000 in purchases in the Columbus and Akron
areas. The student said he had not made the purchases and helped lead
authorities to Su.
Su also used the identities of two other people he met while studying at
Ohio State University, federal prosecutors have said.
Su continued his credit card scam after he moved to Northeast Ohio in 1997
to begin work as an assistant professor of economics at UA, prosecutors have
said.
They said that after buying a house in Green in 1998, Su received a credit
card solicitation for a person who had earlier lived at the address. Su used
the card to buy more than $10,000 in items, prosecutors said. Su also used
identity information of a neighbor in Green to obtain another card.
At UA, Su was making about $50,000 a year. He resigned in May after being
placed on administrative leave without pay.
Lear, Su's attorney, said yesterday that Su recently was hired as an
assistant professor of economics at Morgan State University in Baltimore.
Obviously, Su will not be able to take the job, Lear said.
Katie Byard can be reached at 330-996-3781 or k****[email protected]
Published Wednesday, June 20, 2001, in the Akron Beacon Journal.
Ex-UA professor gets jail sentence
Native of China given maximum 16-month term for identity theft
BY KATIE BYARD
Beacon Journal staff writer
CLEVELAND: At the University of Akron, he taught economics.
Outside the classroom, professor Dongwei Su practiced a criminal xxxx of
supply and demand. When his demand for goods outstripped his supply of money
, he stole the identities of others, got credit cards in their names and
racked up credit card bills of more than $100,000 to finance a lavish
lifestyle.
Yesterday, U.S. District Judge Patricia Anne Gaughan told the 30-year-old
native of China that his actions were ``particularly deplorable, given all
the advantages you have had in this country. Sentencing Su to the maximum 16
months in federal prison, Gaughan told the xxxxer UA professor that she
agreed with federal attorneys who said that he was motivated by ``pure,
unadulterated greed.
Su will serve the next 11 months in prison because he was given credit for
the five months of jail time he has served following his indictment earlier
this year. In January, a federal grand jury returned a 14-count indictment
against Su. He was arrested and detained without bond.
In late April, Su pleaded guilty to mail fraud and credit card related
charges . Su admitted using the identity inxxxxation of five people
including people he had met while studying at Ohio State University to
obtain credit cards. Federal prosecutors have said Su used credit cards to
buy plane tickets , furniture and other items.
Su, a Chinese citizen, now faces deportation to his homeland.
Wearing navy blue prison garb and unshackled from handcuffs that he wore
when he was escorted into court, Su told the judge: ``I feel very sorry for
the crime that I have committed. I feel very sorry.
Defense attorney Michael Lear argued in the Cleveland courtroom for a lesser
sentence. He pointed out that once Su finishes serving this sentence, he
will be detained by the Immigration and Naturalization Service until a
deportation hearing can be scheduled. Lear also asked the judge to consider
Su s youth. Lear said Su was in his early 20s when he began stealing
identities.
``He essentially stopped in 1999, Lear said.
Lear said Su has ``accepted responsibility for his actions and has ``agreed
that greed led him to these actions. . . . Greed got to him and consumed him.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Jackson, however, told the judge Su began to
express remorse for his actions only ``after he was caught. Jackson said
after the sentencing that Su s credit ``had been ruined, or at least was not
good, by the early 1990s. So Su started using other people s names and
Social Security numbers. ``He knew the ramifications of what bad credit does
to you, Jackson said. `` Instead of paying on it, or taking care of it
himself, he went and stole other people s identities.
Su did manage to gradually pay off nearly two-thirds of the $114,241.74 he
racked up in debt using the credit cards he fraudulently obtained. He still
owes $40,544 and Judge Gaughan ordered him to pay that amount in restitution
. She said that after he serves his time in prison, he must make monthly
payments on that debt.
Postal inspectors began investigating Su s use of credit cards last year,
when a xxxxer graduate student from Ohio State said credit companies began
pestering him about more than $39,000 in purchases in the Columbus and Akron
areas. The student said he had not made the purchases and helped lead
authorities to Su.
Su also used the identities of two other people he met while studying at
Ohio State University, federal prosecutors have said. Su continued his
credit card scam after he moved to Northeast Ohio in 1997 to begin work as
an assistant professor of economics at UA, prosecutors have said.
They said that after buying a house in Green in 1998, Su received a credit
card solicitation for a person who had earlier lived at the address. Su used
the card to buy more than $10,000 in items, prosecutors said. Su also used
identity inxxxxation of a neighbor in Green to obtain another card. At UA,
Su was making about $50,000 a year. He resigned in May after being placed on
administrative leave without pay.
Lear, Su s attorney, said yesterday that Su recently was hired as an
assistant professor of economics at Morgan State University in Baltimore.
Obviously, Su will not be able to take the job, Lear said.
http://www.edu.cn/20031204/3095391.shtml
教育部公布2003年度“优秀青年教师资助计划”资助人选名单
78 苏冬蔚 暨南大学 经济学 我国上市公司可持续发展的计量模型与经验分析
http://pgsu.jnu.edu.cn/autonews/show.aspx?id=109&cid=8
经济学院研究生会邀请苏冬蔚教授做学术讲座 - 暨南大学研究生组织
10 月21日晚上七点,美国俄亥俄州立大学博士、暨大特聘一级教授、暨大微观金融研
究中心主任苏冬蔚教授接受经济学院研究生会邀请,在该学院401教室做了题为“金融
经济学的历史与未来”的经济、金融前沿课题讲座。苏冬蔚教授用了两个多小时为研究
生们深入浅出地介绍了金融经济学学科的十四个重要的里程碑及前沿动态,虽然苏教授
年仅30出头,但扎实的理论基础和多年在美国从事金融经济学的教学研究背景,使他谈
起金融经济学的发展历史时如数家珍,感触良多。这次讲座得到经济学院研究生们的积
极参与,拥有数百座位的教室座无虚席,很多学生加座或站着听苏教授精彩的讲评。活
动后,研究生们普遍反映该次讲座不仅使他们对金融经济学的历史和前沿动态有了一个
全面的了解,而且苏教授在串讲过程中的一些点评也启发了他们新的研究思路和研究方
法,让他们获益匪浅。
http://ec.jnu.edu.cn/runchun/news_show/news_show.asp?newsid=528
苏冬蔚老师获2005年度国家自然科学基金项目
作者:[学院教科办] 加入时间:[2005-10-26 15:06:11]
近日获悉,我院金融系苏冬蔚教授获2005年度国家自然科学基金一项,立项课题为“我
国上市公司多元化经营与内部资本市场效率的理论与实证研究”,资助金额 16万。此
前,我院已获国家社科项目2项,分别是经济系李郁芳教授的“政府行为外部性的经济
分析”,资助6.5万元;财税系冯海波博士的“税费改革后农村基层组织运行和公益事
业问题研究”(青年项目),资助6万元。
今年我院教师踊跃申报国家级课题,尤其是青年教师积极性非常高。但从总体看获得的
项目数并不太理想。除客观因素外,我们应更多地从主观因素去找原因,例如申报书的
规范填写、人员的配备、研究范围大小与条件等等。希望没有拿到项目的老师不要气馁
,再接再厉,在此基础上将申报书作进一步的完善,并可考虑向团队项目发展。
http://www.paper.edu.cn/scholar/paper.jsp?name=sudongwei
苏冬蔚专栏
苏冬蔚,男,1970年12月出生于福建厦门,于1992年7月毕业于厦门大学经济系,1997
年6月获美国俄亥俄州立大学(The Ohio State
University)经济学博士学位,1997年8月至2002年5月在美国大学担任经济学和金融学
助理教授,2002年9月被暨南大学聘为金融学教授、博士生导师和校特聘教授,主要学
术兼职包括暨南大学微观金融研究中心主任、美国Sandra Ann Morsilli亚太金融市场
研究中心客座研究员和澳门科技大学长期访问教授。主要研究方向为微观金融理论与实
证(含投资学、公司金融和市场微观结构)。苏教授是最早将我国证券市场和上市公司
研究推向国际学术界的学者,如在1998年Journal of Economics and Business的一篇
论文中运用GARCH模型分析信息结构、政策因素和交易制度对我国股市风险与收益的影
响,首次用规范的研究方法论证我国股市为“政策市”,在1999年Pacific-Basin
Finance Journal的一篇论文中首次系统研究上市公司原始股折价的原因,后者获美国
Sandra Ann Morsilli亚太金融市场研究中心和泰国股票交易所国际杰出研究奖并已被
Review of Economics and Statistics和Journal of Corporate Finance等SSCI期刊多
次引用,于2003年出版的《中国股票市场研究》(世界科学出版社)被美国经济学会誉
为是“对中国证券市场研究最完整的专著”(2003年Journal of Economic Literature
41, p.1200),同时,被英国皇家经济学会Steven Green教授誉为是“第一本运用规
范的金融理论和实证方法系统分析中国股市的(英文)学术专著”(2003年
International Affairs 79, p.683)。另外,在《经济研究》、《数量经济技术经济
研究》、Financial Review、China Economic Review和Journal of International
Financial Markets, Institutions & Money等重要的国内外学术期刊上发表论文20篇
。曾任中国留美金融学会理事和总编辑,多次为美国国家科学基金会、香港大学资助局
、国家自然科学基金会和国家哲学社会科学基金会评审课题,为国内外重要的金融和经
济学术刊物评审文章,并多次应邀在美国经济学会、美国财务管理学会和亚太金融学会
等著名国际学术会议上宣读论文。