Nicolas Williams

Associate Professor, Graduate Director
1218 Crosley Tower
513-556-2390
nicolas.williams@uc.edu
http://homepages.uc.edu/~willian

Download This Information

Education

B.A., Economics, High Honors, The University of Michigan, 1982.

PhD, Northwestern University, 1989.

Positions & Work Experience

1987-1990, Assistant Professor, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida.

1990-1997, Assistant Professor, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio.

1997 to Present , Associate Professor, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio.

2000-, Honorary Visiting Scholar, University of Leicester, Leicester, England.

2007-2008, Visiting Associate Professor, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.

Research Interests

Labor Economics, Applied Econometrics

Peer Reviewed Publications

Nicolas Williams (1991). Reexamining the Wage, Tenure and Experience Relationship. Review of Economics and Statistics 512-517.

Nicolas Williams (1993). Regional Effects of the Minimum Wage on Teenagers. Applied Economics, 25, 1517-1528.

Karylee Laird & Nicolas Williams (1996). Employment Growth in the Temporary Help Supply Industry. Journal of Labor Research, 17(4), 663-681.

Francis T. Cullen, Nicolas Williams, & John Paul Wright (1996). Labor Market Participation and Youth Crime: The Neglect of ‘Working’ in Delinquency Research. Social Pathology, 2(3), 195-217.

Francis T. Cullen, Nicolas Williams, & John Paul Wright (1997). Work Conditions and Juvenile Delinquency: Is Youth Employment Criminogenic?. Criminal Justice Policy Review, 8(2, 3), 119-143.

Francis T. Cullen, Nicolas Williams, & John Paul Wright (1997). Working While in School and Delinquent Involvement: Implications for Social Policy. Crime and Delinquency, 43(2), 203-221.

Joseph G. Altonji & Nicolas Williams (1998). The Effects of Labor Market Experience, Job Seniority and Job Mobility on Wage Growth. Research in Labor Economics, 17, 233-276.

Jeffrey A. Mills & Nicolas Williams (1998). Minimum Wage Effects by Gender. Journal of Labor Research, 19(2), 397-414.

Jeffrey A. Mills, Kakoli Roy, & Nicolas Williams (1999). Recent Minimum Wage Increases and the Minimum Wage Labor Force. Journal of Labor Research, 20(4), 479-492.

Nicolas Williams & Jeffrey A. Mills (2001). The Minimum Wage and Teenage Employment: Evidence From Time Series. Applied Economics, 33, 285-300.

Nicolas Williams & Sourushe Zandvakili (2002). Economic Impacts of Sales Taxes on Temporary Employment Services. International Business and Economics Research Journal, 1, 39-52.

Joseph G. Altonji & Nicolas Williams (2005). Do Wages Rise With Job Seniority? A Reassessment. Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 58(3), 370-397.

Nicolas Williams (2009). Seniority, Experience, and Wages in the UK. Labour Economics, 16, 272-283.

Book Chapters

Joseph G. Altonji & Nicolas Williams (1993). Labor Demand and Equilibrium Wage Formation. In J.C. van Ours, G.A. Pfann, and G. Ridder (Eds.), Using Wage Growth Models to Estimate the Returns to Experience, Seniority, and Job Mobility (pp. 327-355). Amsterdam: North-Holland.

Bonnie S. Fisher, E. Lynn Jenkins, & Nicolas Williams (1998). Crime at Work: Increasing the Risk for Offenders, Volume II. In Martin Gill (Eds.), The Extent and Nature of Homicide and Nonfatal Workplace Violence in the United States: Implications for Prevention and Security Leiceister, United Kingdom: Perpetuity Press.

Other Publications

Nicolas Williams (1997). College Completion and Employment During College. Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference of the International Labour Markets Research Network.

Nicolas Williams & Sourushe Zandvakili (2002). Economic Impacts of Sales Taxes on Temporary Employment Services. Proceedings of International Applied Business Research Conference 1-13.

Other Experience and Professional Memberships

American Economic Association.

Econometric Society.

Society of Labor Economists.

Courses Taught

15-ECON-678 APPLIED QUAL MODELS.

15-ECON-558 LABOR MKT ANALYSIS .

15-ECON-342 MICRO ECON THEORY.

15-ECON-102 INTRO TO ECONOMICS .

15-ECON-101 INTRO TO ECONOMICS.

15-ECON-672 EC DATA ANALYSIS II.

15-ECON-557 ECON OF WORK AND FAMILY.

Powered by eProfessional