Nicola Lacetera

Associate Professor of Strategic Management, Department of Management, University of Toronto Mississauga Chief Scientist, BEAR Centre at Rotman School of Management

Schools

  • Rotman School of Management

Links

Biography

Rotman School of Management

Bio

Nicola Lacetera is an Associate Professor in the Department of Management at the University of Toronto Mississauga, with a cross-appointment to the Strategic Management area at Rotman and to the Economics Department.  He is an applied economist with a number of research interests. First, he has collaborated with several non-profit organizations to conduct field experiments to study the motivations for altruistic behaviour, and in particular blood and organ donations, thus informing these organizations on how to enhance contributions from donors. A second line of research concerns how ethical beliefs affect the acceptance of certain “controversial” transactions (such as paying for blood or organs, patenting living organisms, or prostitution). Third, he uses large datasets from used car auctions to assess the determinants of value and quality of automobile. Finally, Nico studies how different individual motivations and institutional arrangements affect the production and commercialization of knowledge.

Read about executive education

Other experts

Colin Blaydon

Bio Professor Blaydon works with real-world issues of best practices, securities and deal structure, valuation, financial reporting, and governance. He was previously the dean of Tuck, and now teaches the course Private Equity Finance. Current Research Topics Private equity best practices Secur...

Jeroen Luyten

Jeroen Luyten is associate professor at the Faculty of Medicine and head of the Leuven Institute for Healthcare Policy, one of the research units of the Department of Public Health and Primary Care at KU Leuven. Before joining KU Leuven, prof. Luyten worked as a post-doc fellow in health economi...

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.