I am an empirical development economist with interests in firms and markets in developing
countries, regional shocks and their impact on long-term development, and the political
economy of India. My research uses data from a wide variety of settings, ranging from
19th century Boston to contemporary India, and applies both structural and reduced
form methodologies.
Keniston, D., Larsen, B., Li, S., Prescott, J.J., Silviera, B., Yu, C. (2024). Fairness
in Incomplete Information Bargaining. International Economic Review, Forthcoming.
Keniston, D., Banerjee, A., Duflo, E., Chattopadyay, R., and Singh, N. (2021). Improving
Police Performance in Rajasthan, India: Experimental Evidence on Incentives, Managerial
Autonomy, and Training. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy.
Banerjee, A., Duflo, E., Keniston, D., Singh, N., and , .. The Efficient Deployment
of Police Resources: Theory and New Evidence from a Randomized Drunk Driving Crackdown
in India. Econometrica.
Keniston, D. and Allcott, H. (2018). Dutch Disease or Agglomeration? The Local Economic
Effects of Commodity Booms and Busts in Modern America. Review of Economic Studies,
85(2), 695-731.
Hornbeck, R. and Keniston, D. (2017). Creative Destruction: Barriers to Urban Growth
and the Great Boston Fire of 1872. American Economic Review, 107(6), 1365-1398.
Banerjee, A., Banerji, R., Duflo, E., Glennerster, R., Keniston, D., Khemani, S.,
and Shotland, M. (2007). Can information campaigns raise awareness and local participation
in primary education?. Economic and Political Weekly, , 1365--1372.
Research Interests: Development Economics, Industrial Organization, Economic History,
Urban Economics
Keniston, D., Cassan, G., and Kleineberg, T. (2021). A Division of Laborers: Identity
and Efficiency in India