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Instructors' Bios
Don Coursey
Don L. Coursey is the Ameritech Professor of Public
Policy Studies at
the Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies at the
University
of Chicago. From 1996 to 1998, Coursey served as Dean of the Harris
School.
Coursey's research has focused on new ways to understand
and balance
public preferences among the competing public policy goals. He has also
done extensive research on the design of regulation, particularly in
the
area of the environment and natural resources. Coursey recently led an
investigation of environmental equity in Chicago by examining the
relationship
between the location of older hazardous industrial sites and the racial
composition of the surrounding neighborhoods. In 1996, Coursey
co-authored The Locality of Waste
Sites Within the City of Chicago: A Demographic,
Social and Economic Analysis, a report that examined the
relationship between
active hazardous sites (such as incinerators or landfills), minority
populations,
and public health concerns.
Coursey joined the faculty of the Harris School in 1993.
He received
both a B.A. in mathematics and a Ph.D. in economics from the University
of Arizona, and has previously taught at the University of Wyoming and
Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. He has received the
Burlington-Northern
Foundation Award for Distinguished Achievement in Teaching; the Greater
St. Louis Award for Excellence in University Teaching; and the John M.
Olin School of Business Teacher of the Year Award in 1989 and 1990.
Donald Cox
Donald Cox is a professor of Economics at Boston
College. His areas of policy and teaching expertise include labor
economics, the economics of the family and statistical analysis.
His current research focuses on intergenerational transfers of money
and time, in both developing and developed countries. His latest
paper deals with the connection between reproductive biology and the
economics of family behavior. His research and teaching takes an
inter-disciplinary approach, using ideas from fields such as biology,
psychology and anthropology to improve economic models. He is a
long-time teacher of statistics and econometrics.
He has served as a consultant for the World Bank and is
currently a study section participant at the National Institutes of
Health. He was a National Fellow at the Hoover Institution at
Stanford University. Cox holds a Ph.D. in economics from Brown
University and received his undergraduate degree in economics from
Boston College.
Richard J.
Mahoney
Richard J. Mahoney is the Distinguished Executive in
Residence at the
Weidenbaum Center. He was Chairman & CEO of the Monsanto
Company
from 1983-1995. During that period he changed Monsanto from a largely
chemical
commodity company to the world leader in Agricultural Biotechnology, a
strong player in the pharmaceutical industry, and a company recognized
for its forward-thinking environmental policies. A prolific
writer and lecturer on public
policy
issues, he was a regular contributor to the Sunday New York Times as a
columnist for “From the Desk of” and “Viewpoint.” He has written
numerous op-eds on subjects including Regulation, Taxation, Tort Law,
Environmental
Policy, Corporate Governance, Health Care, Science Policy, Corporate
Political
Contributions, and Trade Policy. He established the CEO Series at
the
Weidenbaum Center — a collection of original essays by prominent
corporate
CEOs. His essay, “The Anatomy of a Public Policy Crisis,” is
widely
quoted and used in university classwork. He holds honorary
degrees
from Exeter College, Oxford University, England; UMASS; University of
Missouri-St.
Louis; and Westminster College.
Paul
Rothstein
Paul Rothstein is an associate professor in the Department of
Economics and associate director of the Weidenbaum Center.
Rothstein's specialty is public sector economics, and he has written in
the areas of local public finance, taxation, and public choice.
His recent work includes, "Group Welfare and the Formation of a Common
Labor Market: Some Global Results," International Tax and Public Finance
(2006) and "Possibility, Impossibility and History in the Origins of
the Marriage Tax," National Tax
Journal (2003). Professor Rothstein is currently
interested in the benefits and costs of competition among local
governments and the role of political processes, legal institutions and
central government in channeling this competition. He is also
studying the development of region-specific philanthropy and its
effects on business location, regional economic growth, and the local
public sector.
Russell
Roberts
Roberts is Director of the Weidenbaum Center's Media
Retreat and Professor of Economics at George Mason University. He
is interested in making economic ideas accessible to non-economists.
His
latest book is The Invisible Heart: An Economic Romance (MIT
Press,
2001). Written in the form of a novel, it takes a provocative look at
corporate
responsibility, government regulation and the role of business in our
lives.
His novel on international trade policy, The Choice:
A Fable of Free
Trade and Protectionism, was named one of the top ten books of 1994
by Business Week and one of the best books of 1994 by the Financial
Times.
An updated and revised edition was published in the spring of
2000.
Roberts is a frequent commentator on business and
economics for National
Public Radio's "Morning Edition." In addition to numerous academic
publications,
he has written for the New York Times
and the Wall Street
Journal.
Steven Smith
Steven Smith is the Director of the
Weidenbaum Center
on the Economy, Government, and Public Policy. He is the Kate M.
Gregg Professor of Social Sciences and Professor of Political Science.
He received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1980. He has
worked on Capitol Hill in several capacities and has served as a senior
fellow at the Brookings Institution. He has authored or edited nine
books on U.S. congressional politics and parliamentary politics in
Russia, including a recent book, Party Influence in Congress (Cambridge). His textbook on congressional politics, The American Congress,
is in its fifth edition. He is working on books on party
leadership in the U.S. Senate and presidential-parliamentary relations
in Russia.
Murray
Weidenbaum
Murray Weidenbaum has been an economist in three worlds
-- business, government
and academia. He holds the Mallinckrodt Distinguished University
Professorship
at Washington University in St. Louis, where he also serves as Honorary
Chairman
of the University's Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government, and
Public
Policy. He was chairman of the Congressional Trade Deficit Review
Commission in 1999-2000.
In 1981 and 1982, Dr. Weidenbaum was President Reagan's
first chairman
of the Council of Economic Advisers. He helped to formulate the
economic
policy of the Reagan Administration and was a key spokesman for the
Administration
on economic and financial issues. In 1983-89, he was a member of the
President's
Economic Policy Advisory Board.
Earlier, Dr. Weidenbaum was the Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury
for Economic Policy in the Nixon Administration. He also served as the
Corporate Economist at the Boeing Company. He is a member of the board
of directors of Harbour Group, Macroeconomic
Advisers, and Center for Strategic and International
Studies. He is a member
of advisory boards of the Congressional Joint Tax Committee, the Center
for Strategic Tax Reform, the American Council for Capital Formation,
the
American Enterprise Institute, the Committee for Economic Development,
and the Foreign Policy Research Institute.
He received a B.B.A. from City College of New York, an
M.A. from Columbia
University, and a Ph.D. from Princeton University. He has been a
faculty
member at Washington University since 1964 and was Chairman of the
Economics
Department from 1966 to 1969.
Bruce Yandle
Bruce
Yandle is a distinguished adjunct professor of economics for George Mason University's
Mercatus Center's Capitol Hill Campus program and the dean emeritus
of the Clemson College of Business and Behavioral Sciences.
Dr. Yandle is the author or co-author of numerous books, including Taking the Environment Seriously, The Political Limits of Environmental Regulation, Environmental Use and the Market, Land Rights, The Economics of Environmental Quality, and most recently, Common Sense and Common Law for the Environment. He is a member of the South Carolina State Board of Economic Advisors.
From
1976 to 1978, Dr. Yandle was a senior economist on the staff of the
President's Council on Wage and Price Stability, where he reviewed and
analyzed newly proposed regulations. From 1982 to 1984, he was
executive director of the Federal Trade Commission. Before entering a
career in university teaching, Dr. Yandle was in the industrial
machinery business in Georgia for fifteen years.
Dr. Yandle received his PhD and MBA from Georgia State University and his AB degree from Mercer University.
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