Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Jonathan Levin

Jonathan Levin is an American economist and academic administrator serving as the 13th president of since August 1, 2024. Previously, he held the position of dean of the from 2016 to 2024, where he also served as the Philip H. Knight Professor of Economics. A prominent scholar in the fields of and , Levin is renowned for his research on contracting, auctions, market design, and platforms, earning him the from the in 2011, awarded to the most outstanding economist under the age of 40. Born and raised in , Levin graduated from in 1994 with bachelor's degrees in mathematics and English. He then pursued graduate studies abroad, earning an M.Phil. in from the in 1996, followed by a Ph.D. in from the in 1999. Levin joined the Stanford faculty as an of in 2000, advancing to in 2005 and full thereafter, while also holding the Holbrook Working Professorship in Price Theory. In addition to his academic roles, he chaired the Stanford Department of from 2011 to 2014 and served on the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology from 2021 to 2025. Levin's research has had significant practical impacts, including the design of the Federal Communications Commission's broadcast incentive auction and contributions to the first Advanced Market Commitment for vaccines. His work on , and markets, and econometric methods has been published in leading journals, and he has consulted for major organizations such as the FCC, U.S. Treasury, , , , and . Among his honors, Levin is a of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Econometric Society, a former Fellow, and a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader; he also received Stanford's Dean's Award for Distinguished Teaching in 2005. In his , Levin is married to Amy Levin, and they have three children, having raised their family on the Stanford campus while enjoying outdoor activities.

Early life and education

Family background

Jonathan Levin was born on November 17, 1972, in . He is the son of Richard "Rick" Levin, an economist who served as of from 1993 to 2013, and Jane (Aries) Levin, who holds a in from Yale and later taught there, including leading the Directed Studies program. Levin's parents, both Stanford alumni from the class of 1968, met during their undergraduate years at the university and married shortly after graduation, fostering a deep family connection to institutions. Levin grew up as the eldest of four siblings in an intellectually stimulating environment in New Haven, where his parents were faculty members at Yale, surrounded by frequent discussions of academics, , and . This upbringing exposed him early to the rigors and rewards of scholarly life, with his father's progression from to modeling a path of academic leadership that significantly influenced Levin's own career choices in and administration. His mother's emphasis on further shaped his interdisciplinary interests, blending analytical rigor with a passion for teaching and intellectual exploration. Of Jewish heritage through his father's Jewish-American family roots, Levin was raised with values centered on , , and ethical inquiry that underscored the family's academic pursuits and early life experiences.

Academic training

Jonathan Levin was born into a family with a deep academic legacy, including his father, Richard Levin, a prominent economist who served as president of from 1993 to 2013. Levin pursued his undergraduate education at , where he earned a in English and a in in 1994. Following his undergraduate studies, Levin received the opportunity to study abroad, earning a in Economics from Nuffield College at the in 1996. Levin then advanced to doctoral studies at the (MIT), completing a in in 1999. His dissertation, titled Relational Contracts, Incentives and Information, explored topics in and incentives, reflecting the rigorous training in economic theory and provided by MIT's esteemed Department of .

Academic career

Early positions

Following the completion of his in from the in 1999, Jonathan Levin held a Post-Doctoral Fellowship at the Cowles Foundation for Research in at from 1999 to 2000. This role provided an opportunity to refine his early research, building on his dissertation topics in microeconomic theory and contractual relationships, which laid foundational groundwork for his subsequent work in . During his time at the Cowles Foundation, Levin's emerging interests centered on the of markets, including auctions and competition under asymmetric information, as evidenced by his initial publications in 2000. This postdoctoral position marked his transition into independent academic research, bridging graduate training to faculty appointments amid the field's growing emphasis on empirical and theoretical analyses of organizational incentives and market mechanisms.

Stanford faculty role

Jonathan Levin joined the Stanford University faculty as an in the Department of Economics in 2000. He advanced through the academic ranks, earning promotion to in 2005 and to full professor in 2009, and served as the Philip H. Knight Professor of Economics from 2016 to 2024. He was also appointed the Holbrook Working Professor of Price Theory in 2012. Prior to his assistant professorship, Levin briefly served as a postdoctoral fellow at following his PhD. Throughout his tenure at Stanford, Levin has shouldered significant teaching responsibilities, particularly in graduate-level courses on and . His instruction has covered core topics such as graduate sequences, industrial organization theory, and market design, contributing to the department's rigorous curriculum in economic theory and applied fields. These efforts have emphasized conceptual frameworks in , , and economic mechanisms, fostering analytical skills among advanced students. Levin has also played a key role in mentoring PhD students, advising numerous candidates from 2002 through 2019 on their dissertations and research trajectories. Examples of his advisees include Erin Baker in 2002 and Yiwei Chen in 2019, reflecting his sustained commitment to guiding emerging economists in microeconomic theory and related areas. In addition to direct supervision, he served as Graduate Placement Officer for the department from 2008 to 2009, aiding in the and job market preparation of doctoral candidates. Beyond teaching and mentorship, Levin contributed to departmental leadership as of the Department of from 2011 to 2014, a period during which the department enhanced its reputation for excellence in economic research and education. In this role, he oversaw faculty appointments, curriculum development, and strategic initiatives, strengthening interdisciplinary ties within Stanford's School of Humanities and Sciences.

Leadership at Stanford

Deanship of Graduate School of Business

Jonathan Levin was appointed as the tenth dean of the (GSB) in May 2016, with his tenure beginning on September 1 of that year, succeeding Garth Saloner. He served in this role until July 2024, when he transitioned to the presidency of . During his deanship, Levin emphasized strategic enhancements to the school's educational offerings, drawing on his prior experience as a faculty member in to foster interdisciplinary approaches in . Levin spearheaded several key initiatives to modernize the GSB curriculum and student experience. He led the development and launch of the Action Learning Program in 2020, a series of immersive, project-based courses that pair MBA and MSx students with external organizations to tackle real-world business challenges, such as data-driven innovation and corporate entrepreneurship. This expanded experiential learning opportunities, building on programs like the Global Management Immersion Experience (GMIX), a four-week summer initiative that deploys students to international projects for hands-on global exposure. In parallel, Levin prioritized the integration of emerging technologies, including and data analytics, into the curriculum; early efforts included joint courses with on AI techniques and behavioral science, while the @GSB initiative promoted applied AI literacy through workshops and ethical applications in business. Diversity and inclusion were central to his vision, culminating in a 2019 school-wide commitment to DEI, which set goals for increasing representation in classrooms, empowering underrepresented groups, and launching initiatives like diverse case studies featuring more minority protagonists (rising from 1% to 6% over two years). Levin's tenure also involved navigating significant external challenges, particularly the , which necessitated a rapid shift to remote learning in 2020. Faculty adapted by innovating with tools like breakout rooms for interactive sessions, while preserving virtual elements such as global guest speakers post-pandemic; however, Levin highlighted the irreplaceable value of in-person interactions for serendipitous learning. Amid economic uncertainty, he sustained robust pipelines and enrollment, maintaining for graduate outcomes. These efforts enhanced the school's resources, supporting expanded experiential and technology-focused programs during turbulent times.

Presidency of Stanford University

Jonathan Levin was appointed as the 13th president of on April 4, 2024, succeeding following a comprehensive search by the Presidential Search Committee. He assumed office on August 1, 2024, and was ceremonially inaugurated on September 27, 2024, at Frost Amphitheater, where he outlined his vision for the university's future. His prior deanship of the Graduate School of Business provided foundational experience in institutional leadership that informed his transition to the presidency. Upon taking office, Levin prioritized advancing interdisciplinary to position Stanford at the forefront of and , emphasizing across disciplines to tackle global challenges. He also focused on addressing free speech and campus climate issues in the wake of controversies, including pro-Palestinian protests and debates over institutional neutrality, by promoting free inquiry, , and clear policies to protect expression while ensuring community safety. Additionally, Levin committed to goals, building on Stanford's longstanding target of achieving carbon neutrality by 2030 through initiatives that integrate into university operations and . In 2025, Levin participated in key events such as the Hoover Institution's May 8 celebration honoring economist , where he delivered opening remarks underscoring Stanford's role in discourse. He responded to evolving policy changes under the new U.S. administration by articulating guiding principles for federal engagement, including advocacy for sustained research funding and protections for amid potential shifts in science policy and endowment taxation. Levin's ongoing membership on the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST), appointed in 2021, has enabled him to influence federal science policy, advising on priorities like and equitable access to . In 2025, Levin announced plans to expand access to Stanford by increasing the size of first-year and classes. Later that month, he discussed challenges for universities in an era of during a with .

Research contributions

Fields of study

Jonathan Levin's research primarily focuses on and microeconomic theory, with particular emphasis on market design, antitrust economics, and contracting theory. His work in examines , structures, and the design of rules to address inefficiencies arising in real-world settings. In microeconomic theory, Levin explores foundational models of strategic interactions and under . A central theme in Levin's scholarship is the study of relational contracts, which investigate how ongoing relationships sustain incentives in the absence of formal enforcement mechanisms. He emphasizes the role of incentives in aligning parties' interests, particularly when asymmetries—such as actions or —complicate transactions and lead to or . These concepts are applied to understand organizational dynamics, where repeated interactions foster trust and efficiency in contracts that cannot be fully specified upfront. Levin's research extends these ideas to practical applications in platform economies, such as those operated by firms, where effects and data-driven matching create unique challenges for and welfare. He addresses real-world issues like regulatory , including antitrust enforcement in markets and the design of auctions for allocation, to promote fair and . His interests have evolved from early explorations of incentive mechanisms in work on self-enforcing contracts to contemporary analyses of marketplaces and . During his faculty role at Stanford, Levin has taught courses in these areas, including and market .

Key works and impact

Levin's research has significantly advanced the understanding of incentives and contracting in organizations, most notably through his seminal 2003 paper "Relational Incentive Contracts," published in the American Economic Review, which examines self-enforcing contracts under imperfect observability and builds directly on his 1999 MIT PhD thesis, "Relational Contracts, Incentives and Information." This work demonstrates how relational contracts can sustain incentives in repeated interactions without formal enforcement, influencing models of long-term organizational relationships. In the area of market design and auctions, Levin co-authored influential papers on online platforms, including "Auctions versus Posted Prices in Online Markets" (2018, ), which analyzes data to model the trade-off between auctions and fixed prices, highlighting efficiency gains from competitive discovery. He collaborated with on related topics, such as "Online Advertising: Heterogeneity and Conflation in Market Design" (2010, ), addressing strategies in auctions. Additionally, his 2007 paper "Estimating Dynamic Models of " (), co-authored with Patrick Bajari and C. Lanier Benkard, provides a two-step for estimating dynamic games, enabling empirical analysis of firm entry, exit, and investment in concentrated markets. Levin's contributions extend to empirical studies of competition, including collaborations with on "Information and Competition in U.S. Forest Service Timber Auctions" (2001, Journal of Political Economy), which reveals how information asymmetries skew bidding and affect auction outcomes. His research has garnered over 16,000 citations as of 2025, underscoring its broad influence in and . Key works have shaped policy, particularly in spectrum auctions; for instance, "Winning Play in Spectrum Auctions" (2009, NBER , with Jeremy Bulow and ) informed FCC designs by addressing bidder strategies amid exposure risks, contributing to more efficient allocations in multi-billion-dollar sales. Levin has advised on competition policy, participating in FTC and DOJ hearings on and antitrust (2002) and delivering remarks at a DOJ workshop on and antitrust (2020). His analyses of digital markets have impacted tech regulation discussions, providing frameworks for evaluating platform competition and antitrust enforcement in cases involving online intermediaries. Post-2020, Levin's publications have explored evolving market dynamics, including "Customers and Retail Growth" (2021, revised 2022, NBER Working Paper No. 29561, with Liran Einav, Peter J. Klenow, and Raviv Murciano-Goroff), which uses transaction data to assess how customer acquisition drives expansion. His public commentary has addressed AI-driven markets, emphasizing antitrust adaptations for algorithmic , including discussions on AI's concentration of earnings and needs for and safety as of 2025.

Awards and honors

Major awards

In 2011, Jonathan Levin was awarded the by the , recognizing him as the American economist under the age of 40 who has made the most significant contributions to economic thought and knowledge, particularly in and microeconomic theory. This medal, often considered a precursor to the in Economics, highlights Levin's innovative work on market design, contracting, and . In 2014, Levin received the American Economic Journal: Microeconomics Best Paper Award for his contributions to the field. Levin received the Research Fellowship from 2004 to 2006, a prestigious supporting exceptional early-career scientists in the United States and for their potential to make substantial contributions to their fields. The fellowship underscored his emerging prominence in economic theory and applied during his time as a faculty member at . In 2022, Levin was named Dean of the Year by Poets & Quants for his leadership at the . Earlier in his career, Levin earned the George Webb Medley Thesis Prize from the in 1996 for his outstanding master's thesis in , an honor given annually to the top performer in the program's examinations and dissertation. This award marked his early excellence in theoretical and foreshadowed his later achievements in the field. In 2024, Levin received an Emmy Award (with Auctionomics) for contributions to broadcast incentive auction design.

Fellowships and recognitions

Levin has held several prestigious fellowships that supported his research in economics. In 2014, he received the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, recognizing his contributions to the study of contracts, organizations, and market design. Earlier, from 2004 to 2006, he was awarded an Research Fellowship, which honors early-career scholars for original research. He also served as a National at the from 2002 to 2003 and a at for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences from 2007 to 2008. In 2006, he was named a Kavli Frontiers of . Additionally, in 2012, he was selected as a Young Global Leader by the . Levin has been elected to several leading academic societies, affirming his standing in the economics profession. He became a Fellow of the Econometric Society in 2008, an honor for distinguished contributions to econometrics and economic theory. In 2014, he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, joining scholars across disciplines for excellence in original scholarship. Additionally, he was named a Fellow of the Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory in 2013. Throughout his career, Levin has taken on significant editorial responsibilities, shaping the dissemination of economic research. He served as an Associate Editor for the from 2005 to 2014 and for from 2011 to 2016, among other journals including the RAND Journal of Economics (2005–2011) and the Review of Economic Studies as Foreign Editor (2008–2011). These roles involved overseeing and editorial decisions for high-impact publications in and theoretical economics. In recent years, Levin's leadership roles have brought additional recognitions. He served on the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology from 2021 to 2025, advising on and . In 2023, he received an honorary Doctor Honoris Causa from Universidad ESAN in . As of 2025, he joined the Aspen Economic Strategy Group, a bipartisan forum addressing key economic challenges.

Personal life

Immediate family

Jonathan Levin has been married to Amy Levin, a Yale-trained specializing in , since 1999. The couple met in high school and moved to the Bay Area in 2000, where Amy completed her residency at UCSF and later practiced at the and Private Medical in Menlo Park. Levin and his wife have three children: Madeline, Ben, and Noah. As of 2025, the children, who were young in the mid-2010s, are now teens and young adults; the family has raised them on or near the Stanford campus while balancing academic leadership with outdoor activities together. The children have occasionally appeared publicly alongside their parents at Stanford events, including Levin's 2024 presidential inauguration. The family resides in Palo Alto, California, where Levin maintains a balance between his roles at Stanford and family life, though public details remain limited.

Heritage and interests

Jonathan Levin was born on November 17, 1972, and raised in New Haven, Connecticut, as the eldest of four siblings in a family of academics. His father, Richard Levin, was an economist who served as the president of Yale University from 1993 to 2013. Levin's heritage is Jewish, making him the first Jewish president of Stanford University upon his inauguration in 2024. Levin's personal interests reflect an active lifestyle centered on outdoor pursuits and family time. He is an avid runner, often training in the Stanford Foothills, and enjoys playing . Additionally, he engages in adventures, including backpacking and white-water , which he pursues with his family to foster shared experiences in .

References

  1. [1]
    Jonathan Levin - Stanford Profiles
    Bio. Jonathan Levin, a distinguished economist and academic leader, became Stanford University president on August 1, 2024. Previously, he was the Philip H. ...
  2. [2]
    [PDF] Jon Levin Bio - Stanford University
    Jonathan Levin is the Philip H. Knight Professor and Dean at the Stanford Graduate. School of Business. He has been a member of the Stanford faculty for ...Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  3. [3]
    Biography - Stanford Office of the President
    Aug 1, 2024 · Jonathan Levin was born and raised in New Haven, Connecticut. He earned undergraduate degrees in English and Mathematics at Stanford in 1994, ...
  4. [4]
    GSB Dean Jonathan Levin '94 appointed Stanford president
    Apr 4, 2024 · Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Levin is also the son of former Yale University president and economist Richard Levin, who led Yale from 1993 to ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  5. [5]
    Stanford appoints son of former Yale president Rick Levin as president
    Apr 5, 2024 · Jonathan Levin, the son of former Yale President Richard Levin, was announced as Stanford University's next president in an email to the Stanford community ...
  6. [6]
    Cardinal All the Way | STANFORD magazine
    Levin is known for his work in industrial organization and market design. In 2011, he won the John Bates Clark medal, which recognizes the top economist under ...Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  7. [7]
    Up Toward Mountains Higher | STANFORD magazine
    Milgrom has known Levin since childhood, when Milgrom and Levin's father, Richard, '68, were colleagues at the Yale School of Management. Rick Levin would ...Missing: influence | Show results with:influence<|separator|>
  8. [8]
    Stanford's first Jewish president will inherit a tense climate
    Apr 18, 2024 · He has advanced degrees from Oxford and MIT. He is also the son of Rick Levin, who served as Yale University's president for 20 years. When Rick ...Missing: heritage | Show results with:heritage
  9. [9]
    Rick Levin - Biography - JewAge
    Born in San Francisco, California, to Jewish-American parents, Levin graduated from Lowell High School in San Francisco in 1964. At Lowell, he was a member of ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  10. [10]
    Our Alumni - Nuffield College - University of Oxford
    Jonathan Levin, American economist; Dean of the Stanford Graduate School of ... Nuffield College New Road, Oxford, OX1 1NF +44(0)1865 278500 info ...
  11. [11]
    Relational contracts, incentives and information - DSpace@MIT
    Relational contracts, incentives and information. Author(s). Levin, Jonathan David, 1972-. Thumbnail. DownloadFull printable version (12.06Mb). Other ...
  12. [12]
    Jonathan Levin | Stanford Graduate School of Business
    Jonathan D. Levin, The President of Stanford University and Bing Presidential Professor, served as the tenth dean of Stanford Graduate School of Business.
  13. [13]
    [PDF] Jonathan David Levin - Stanford Office of the President
    Dec 18, 2024 · 1. NSF Research Grant for “Collective Reputation and Relational Contracts”, 2001-2003. 2. NSF Career Award for “Market Design and the Limits ...
  14. [14]
    Jonathan Levin, Clark Medalist 2011
    Levin received both a B.A in English and a B.S. in Mathematics from Stanford University in 1994, followed by an M.Phil. in Economics from Oxford University in ...Missing: Rhodes | Show results with:Rhodes<|control11|><|separator|>
  15. [15]
    Levin Teaching
    The classes are Graduate Microeconomics (first quarter), Graduate Microeconomics (second quarter), Graduate Industrial Organization, Graduate Market Design ...
  16. [16]
    Jonathan Levin | Department of Economics
    Jonathan Levin is the 13th president of Stanford University. He previously served as the Dean of Stanford Graduate School of Business.Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  17. [17]
    Jonathan Levin named dean of Stanford Graduate School of Business
    May 23, 2016 · An economist, Levin will succeed Garth Saloner, who is stepping down after seven years as dean. Levin's appointment is effective Sept. 1.Missing: until 2024
  18. [18]
    Stanford alum, business school dean Jonathan Levin named ...
    Apr 4, 2024 · Levin attended Stanford as an undergraduate, completing a BA in English and a BS in mathematics in 1994. He then completed an MPhil in economics ...
  19. [19]
    Action Learning Program Brings Experiential Learning to Forefront ...
    A set of immersive courses that provides hands-on learning experiences to students in the Stanford MBA Program and Stanford MSx Program.
  20. [20]
    “What I Did Shouldn't Be Possible:” How This Immersion Program ...
    Jun 29, 2022 · The Global Management Immersion Experience, a four-week summer program that sends dozens of MBA students around the world each year.
  21. [21]
    Interview: Stanford GSB Dean Jon Levin - Poets&Quants
    Dec 10, 2018 · The course will combine MBA students with computer science students in studying AI techniques, behavioral science and design thinking. Levin ...
  22. [22]
    AI@GSB — Applied AI Initiative
    AI@GSB is a dean's initiative, led by Applied AI Scholars and faculty advisors, to bring state-of-the-art learning to Stanford GSB.Missing: analytics | Show results with:analytics
  23. [23]
    Our Commitment to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
    Oct 2, 2019 · Stanford Graduate School of Business today announced a school-wide commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, reinforcing its pledge to promote these ...Missing: technology analytics global COVID pandemic fundraising endowments
  24. [24]
    Stanford B-School Dean Jonathan Levin on Diversity, Jobs, and Covid
    Mar 16, 2021 · The school's case studies will have more Black protagonists, and a few pandemic-inspired innovations will stay.Missing: analytics immersion
  25. [25]
    Dean Of The Year: Jon Levin Of Stanford Graduate School Of Business
    ### Fundraising Achievements Under Dean Jonathan Levin at Stanford GSB
  26. [26]
    Stanford's next president
    Apr 4, 2024 · The Board of Trustees has unanimously appointed the next president of Stanford: Jonathan Levin, a Stanford alum, distinguished economist, and dean of Stanford' ...
  27. [27]
    Stanford celebrates the inauguration of President Jonathan Levin
    Sep 28, 2024 · At his inauguration on Friday, President Jonathan Levin outlined his aspirations for the university and invoked the spirit of the American frontier.
  28. [28]
    Stanford Alum, Business School Dean Jonathan Levin Named ...
    Jonathan Levin, a distinguished economist and Stanford alumnus who has led the Stanford Graduate School of Business as dean for the last eight years, ...Missing: tenure until
  29. [29]
    At inauguration, Jonathan Levin '94 embraces presidency with ...
    where his father, economist Rick Levin, was president of Yale University — to California, Levin said ...Missing: Richard | Show results with:Richard
  30. [30]
    A Celebration in Honor of John Taylor | Hoover Institution
    The Hoover Institution hosted A Celebration in Honor of John Taylor on Thursday, May 8, 2025. ... Hoover Tower, Stanford, California. Wednesday, December 3, 2025.
  31. [31]
    President Levin expands on university's guiding principles
    Apr 10, 2025 · President Jonathan Levin elaborated on the principles guiding the university's approach to ongoing federal policy challenges.Missing: PhD advisor
  32. [32]
    Jonathan Levin to advise Biden | Stanford Institute for Economic ...
    Sep 27, 2021 · Jonathan Levin has been tapped to join the White House advisory panel on science and technology.
  33. [33]
    Jonathan Levin - Guggenheim Fellowship
    Levin's research is in industrial organization, the field of economics that studies imperfect competition and market structure, the design of market rules ...
  34. [34]
    Relational Incentive Contracts - American Economic Association
    This paper studies the design of self-enforced relational contracts. I show that optimal contracts often can take a simple stationary form.Missing: asymmetries | Show results with:asymmetries
  35. [35]
    Auctions versus Posted Prices in Online Markets
    We model the choice between auctions and posted prices as a trade-off between competitive price discovery and convenience. Evidence from eBay fits the theory.<|separator|>
  36. [36]
    Online Advertising: Heterogeneity and Conflation in Market Design
    Levin, Jonathan, and Paul Milgrom. 2010. "Online Advertising: Heterogeneity and Conflation in Market Design." American Economic Review 100 (2): 603–07.<|separator|>
  37. [37]
    Estimating Dynamic Models of Imperfect Competition
    Sep 1, 2007 · We test the algorithm on a class of dynamic discrete choice models with normally distributed errors and a class of dynamic oligopoly models ...
  38. [38]
    ‪Jonathan Levin‬ - ‪Google Scholar‬
    Professor of Economics, Stanford University - ‪‪Cited by 16504‬‬ - ‪Economics‬Missing: PhD advisor
  39. [39]
    FTC and DOJ to Hold Roundtable Discussions To Conclude ...
    Oct 18, 2002 · FTC and DOJ to Hold Roundtable Discussions To Conclude Hearings on Competition and Intellectual Property Law and Policy. October 18, 2002.Missing: advising | Show results with:advising
  40. [40]
    Jonathan Levin, Dean of Stanford Graduate School of Business
    Mar 12, 2020 · Review the YouTube Terms of Service and the Google Privacy Policy . Updated March 12, 2020. Component. Antitrust Division. Related Content. Press Release.Missing: advising | Show results with:advising
  41. [41]
    Levin Receives John Bates Clark Medal | NBER
    Levin received the American Economics Association's John Bates Clark Medal for 2011. This annual award recognizes the American economist under the age of 40 ...
  42. [42]
    Current Fellows | The Econometric Society
    Jonathan Levin, Stanford University, elected 2008. David K Levine, Royal Holloway, University of London, elected 1989. Steven Levitt, University of Chicago ...
  43. [43]
  44. [44]
    Jonathan Levin • The Aspen Institute Economic Strategy Group
    In 2011, he received the John Bates Clark Medal as the economist under the age of 40 who has made the most significant contribution to economic thought and ...
  45. [45]
    Why Stanford Named Jonathan Levin Its New B-School Dean
    Jun 1, 2016 · After earning undergraduate degrees in math and English from Stanford in 1994, Levin went on to earn an MPhil in economics from Oxford ...
  46. [46]
    Stanford names business school dean Jonathan Levin new president
    Apr 4, 2024 · Levin is married to Amy Levin, a doctor of internal medicine at Private Medical in Menlo Park who has a Yale University medical degree and a ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  47. [47]
    Inauguration address by Stanford President Jonathan Levin
    Sep 27, 2024 · I want to thank the members of my family who are here, especially my wife Amy, and our children Madeline, Ben, and Noah. And I want to ...
  48. [48]
    Philanthropy Innovation Summit 2025 | Mainstage Program
    President Levin and his wife, Amy Levin, a practicing physician, have raised three children on the Stanford campus and enjoy spending as much time as ...
  49. [49]
    An Interview With the New Stanford GSB Dean
    The newly appointed dean of Stanford GSB is the son of Richard Levin, an economist and former president of Yale University, and Jane Levin, PhD in English ...Missing: influence | Show results with:influence
  50. [50]
    Stanford names Jonathan Levin, business school dean, new president
    Apr 4, 2024 · Levin will lead the university, one of the nation's top-rated and wealthiest with a $36-billion endowment, at a turbulent time in higher ...