Jason Barr

Jason Barr

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

H-index: 18

North America-United States

About Jason Barr

Jason Barr, With an exceptional h-index of 18 and a recent h-index of 15 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, specializes in the field of Urban Economics, Computational Economics.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Cities in the Sky: The Quest to Build the World's Tallest Skyscrapers

Exciting, boring, and nonexistent skylines: Vertical building gaps in global perspective

Policy Research Working Paper 10365

The Economics of Record-Breaking Height.

Introduction to the special issue on agent-based models in urban economics

Viewing urban spatial history from tall buildings

1,760 Acres. That's How Much More of Manhattan We Need.

High-rises versus sprawl: The impacts of building sizes and land uses on CO2 emissions

Jason Barr Information

University

Position

Rutgers University-Newark

Citations(all)

1166

Citations(since 2020)

581

Cited By

789

hIndex(all)

18

hIndex(since 2020)

15

i10Index(all)

29

i10Index(since 2020)

19

Email

University Profile Page

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Jason Barr Skills & Research Interests

Urban Economics

Computational Economics

Top articles of Jason Barr

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Cities in the Sky: The Quest to Build the World's Tallest Skyscrapers

Jason M Barr

2024/5/14

Exciting, boring, and nonexistent skylines: Vertical building gaps in global perspective

Real Estate Economics

Jason Barr

Remi Jedwab

2023/11

Policy Research Working Paper 10365

Policy

Boring Exciting

Nonexistent Skylines

Jason Barr

Remi Jedwab

2023/3

The Economics of Record-Breaking Height.

Jason Barr

Peter A Weismantle

2023/1/1

Introduction to the special issue on agent-based models in urban economics

Jason Barr

Jiaqi Ge

2023/1

Viewing urban spatial history from tall buildings

Regional science and urban economics

Gabriel M Ahlfeldt

Jason Barr

2022/5/1

1,760 Acres. That's How Much More of Manhattan We Need.

International New York Times

Jason M Barr

2022/1/19

High-rises versus sprawl: The impacts of building sizes and land uses on CO2 emissions

Jason Barr

Shaojie Wang

Ujjaini Desirazu

2022/1/1

Cities without skylines: worldwide building-height gaps and their possible determinants and implications

Journal of Urban Economics

Remi Jedwab

Jason Barr

Jan K Brueckner

2022/11/1

The Economics of Skyscrapers: A Synthesis Online Appendix

Gabriel M Ahlfeldt

Jason Barr

2021/12/19

Storm surges, informational shocks, and the price of urban real estate: An application to the case of Hurricane Sandy

Regional Science and Urban Economics

Jeffrey P Cohen

Jason Barr

Eon Kim

2021/9/1

Growing skylines: The economic determinants of skyscrapers in China

The journal of real estate finance and economics

Jason Barr

Jingshu Luo

2021/8

In brief... Economics of skyscrapers

Gabriel M Ahlfeldt

Jason Barr

2020/11/2

Data, Notes, and References for Blog Post on the Economics of the Empire State Building

Jason Barr

Gabriel Ahlfeldt

2020/8/17

Do skyscrapers make economic sense?

USApp–American Politics and Policy Blog

Jason Barr

Gabriel M Ahlfeldt

2020/8/1

Skyscrapers and the Happiness of Cities

Eastern economic journal

Jason Barr

Jennifer Johnson

2020/4

Introduction to the Symposium on Urban Economics

Eastern economic journal

Jason Barr

2020/4

See List of Professors in Jason Barr University(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey)