This page offers information on how to find employment involving
economic and/or public policy research.
One option for summers is to work as a research assistant for a Williams economics professor.. The economics department typically hires several paid research assistants each summer. We send out a request for applications for these positions to all economics majors (as well as to sophomores who have taken any of the core intermediate-level economics courses) early in the spring semester. It is also sometimes helpful for you to talk to a particular professor whose work you find interesting and express your interest in working with him or her.
Many economic and policy research organizations offer summer internships and post-graduation research assistant jobs. These employers typically look for students with good academic records and evidence of economic research skills. Strong academic backgrounds in economics, statistics, and econometrics are often viewed as particulalry useful qualifications. Some experience with computer programming can also be quite helpful. Appropriately, finding these kinds of jobs requires you to do a bit of research, and this web site can help you get started on that. These kinds of places typically post job opening and internship announcements on their web sites and begin accepting applications some time around January, and they often respond and/or conduct interviews during late winter or early spring.
Economic and policy research organizations come in many varieties,
differing in terms of political orientation and in the kinds of
things they do. For example, some places are more academic in
orientation, engaging in impartial research on questions
where they do not necessarily already know the answers. Other
organizations are more oriented towards "advocacy" -- they
tend to assume they already know the answers, and spend most of their
efforts constructing arguments for their side of the debate. Still
other places are somewhere in between. You can learn more about
what
particular policy research organizations do by checking out their web
sites, and also perusing some third-party web sites that provide
directories and summary information about these various
institutions.
Links to some of these directories, as well as links to numerous
examples of major economic and policy research institutions that hire
interns and/or research assistants, are included below:
Directories of public policy research organizations ("think tanks")
Examples of policy research institutions that frequently hire research assistants or interns
Employment Announcements Received 2008-2009
Employment Announcements Received 2007-2008
Employment Announcements Received 2006-2007
In some cases, summer internships are unpaid. In these cases, the college offers a limited amount of funding, on a competitive basis. The Kershaw Internship program in particular often funds internships related to economics and public policy. See the Williams Office of Career Counseling web page on "Williams Alumni Sponsored Internships" for more information on how to apply for these.