Here is the programme for the 4th EWPM in Cracow.
Below are links to some of the presented papers and their subsequently published versions (in chronological order of the publications).
(1) Philipp Harms (with Jakob Schwab), published as “Depression of the deprived or eroding enthusiasm of the elites: What has shifted the support for international trade?” in the European Journal of Political Economy 64, 101901, September 2020.
(2) Etienne Farvaque (with Muhammad Azmat Hayat and Ifrah Siddique), published as "A Momentary Lapse of Reason? Assessing the Pre-and Post-Brexit Preferences of UK Citizens" in the Journal of Economic Integration 36(3), 372-408, 2021.
(3) Etienne Farvaque (with Franck Malan and Maqsood Aslam), published as "A disaster always rings twice: Early life experiences and central bankers' reactions to natural disasters" in Kyklos 74, 301–320, 2021.
(4) Jakub Janus, published as "Long-term sovereign interest rates in Czechia, Hungary and Poland: a comparative assessment with an affine term structure model" in Statistics in Transition: New Series 23(1), 153-171, 2022.
(5) Kirill Borissov and Lucas Bretschger, published as "Optimal carbon policies in a dynamic heterogeneous world" in the European Economic Review 148, 104253, September 2022.
(6) Davide Romelli (with Donato Masciandaro and Paola Profeta), Gender and Monetary Policymaking: Trends and Drivers, BAFFI CAREFIN Centre Research Paper 2015-12 (pdf); forthcoming as "Women and Governance: Central Bank Boards and Monetary Policy" in the American Law and Economic Review.
Alexander Mihailov (with Giovanni Razzu and Zhe Wang), Heterogeneous Effects of Single Monetary Policy on Unemployment Rates in the Largest EMU Economies (pdf)
Marek Dąbrowski, A New Approach to Estimation of Actively Managed Component of Foreign Exchange Reserves
Jan Fidrmuc (with Ruxanda Berlinschi), Comfort and Conformity: A Culture-based Theory of Migration
Krzysztof Beck (with Michał Możdżeń and Piotr Stanek, Can Debt Be Contagious? Long-Run Public Debt Synchronization
<=> 6 published (so far) out of 10 presented papers