I am aware of the post relating to this topic here. However, it doesn't say anything for the paper relating to the economics. I would be glad if seasoned econ colleagues could clear out the confusion in this regard.
Asked
Active
Viewed 755 times
-6
-
Do you have a specific reason to believe the answer would be different for the field of economics? – eykanal Mar 07 '13 at 15:55
-
Yes, because I didn't see any restrictions clause on the calls. However, I want to make sure whether this implies that it is ethically acceptable. – ketau Mar 07 '13 at 16:09
-
4I wouldn't expect to see a restriction on the calls; they don't list all possibly types of bad behavior, with the disclaimer, "don't do this." Looking at the site in the linked question, there are a number of economics journals who are members of the organization; I would imagine that would be demonstration enough that this behavior is universally recognized as unethical. – eykanal Mar 07 '13 at 16:34
-
1The "duplicate"'s answer appears to say that doing this is taboo, but in Economics academia it is perfectly common practice. I just returned from a conference where I saw some of the papers presented for the third or fourth time. – Ubiquitous May 27 '13 at 18:39
1 Answers
0
If in doubt, ask the conference organizers about their policies. I have seen people give essentially the same talk at multiple conferences.

Sander Heinsalu
- 1,075
- 6
- 11