Nabil Al-Najjar
John L. and Helen Kellogg Professor of Managerial Economics & Decision Sciences
Nabil Al-Najjar is the John L. and Helen Kellogg Professor of Managerial Economics and Decision Sciences.
Al-Najjar's research focuses on the development of learning-based models of decision making in markets, games and contracts. His papers have been published in top scholarly journals such the Journal of Economic Theory, Games and Economic Behavior, Journal of Political Economy, Econometrica, among others.
For his excellence in teaching, Al-Najjar has twice been the recipient of the school's Sidney J. Levy Award, in 1996-97 for his class in microeconomics, and 2006-07 for his class in competitive strategy. He has also received the Chairs' Core Teaching Award for his class in microeconomics, as well as several Certificate of Impact awards.
Al-Najjar received his PhD in Economics from the University of Minnesota. Prior to joining the Kellogg faculty in 1995, he was a faculty member at the University of Quebec in Montreal.
- Decision theory
- learning
- game theory
- Microeconomics
- macroeconomics
- competitive strategy
- commodity industries
- decision theory
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PhD, 1989, Economics, University of Minnesota
MA, 1982, Economics, University of Ottawa
BA, 1979, Economics, Al-Mustansiriah University -
Professor, Managerial Economics & Decision Sciences, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University, 1995-present
Professor, University of Quebec, 1989-1995 -
Certificate of Impact Teaching Award (DECS 450), Spring 2016
Certificate of Impact Teaching Award (DECS 450), Fall 2013
Certificate of Impact Teaching Award (DECS 450), Northwestern University, Decision Making and Modeling, Fall 2012
Sidney J. Levy Teaching Award, Kellogg School of Business, 2006-2007, 1996-1997
Chairs Core Course Teaching Award, Kellogg School of Management, 1999-2000
Sidney J. Levy Teaching Award, Kellogg School of Business and Management, 1997 -
Editorial Board, International Journal of Game Theory, 2003-2009
Editorial Board, Journal of Mathematical Economics, 1996-2010