Affiliated Faculty and Researchers
Affiliated Columbia Faculty
- James Carey
- Graciela Chichilnisky
- Nelson Fraiman
- Herbert J. Gans
- Jane Ginsburg
- Bruce Greenwald
- Kathryn Harrigan
- Geoffrey Heal
- Morris Holbrook
- Aurel Lazar
- Robert McClintock
- Richard R. Nelson
- Hugh Patrick
- John V. Pavlik
- Mischa Schwartz
- Bernd Schmitt
- Robert Y. Shapiro
- Michael Van Biema
- Alan F. Westin
- Yechiam Yemini
Affiliated Researchers from Other Institutions
- David Allen
- Huseyin Bayazit
- Michael Botein
- John Carey
- Kenneth R. Carter
- Douglas A. Conn
- Mark Cooper
- William Drake
- Nicholas S. Economides
- Bruce L. Egan
- Michael A. Einhorn
- Martin C.J. Elton
- Valerie Feldmann
- Richard L. Field
- Alain de Fontenay
- John Friedman
- David Gabel
- Min Hang
- Thomas W. Hazlett
- Heather Hudson
- John Kasdan
- Michael Koenig
- Matthias Kurth
- William H. Lehr
- Jonathan Liebenau
- Bruce Lincoln
- Gary Madden
- Thomas McKnight
- Stephen Messer
- Áine NíShéilleabháin
- Lorenzo Pupillo
- Paul Rappoport
- David J. Salant
- Michael Salinger
- Harumasa Sato
- Jorge Reinan Schement
- J.H. Snider
- Dan Steinbock
- Johannes Tyrell
- Joost van Dreunen
- Harold Vogel
- Len Waverman
- Timothy Wendt
- Alex Wolfson
- Tal Zarsky
Affiliated Columbia Faculty
James Carey
James Carey is a Professor of Journalism at Columbia University. He formerly held the George Gallup chair at the University of Iowa and was Dean and Director of the Institute of Communications Research at the University of Illinois. Professor Carey's research on the history and politics of communications technology has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Freedom Forum, the Center for Advanced Study at Illinois and the Poynter Institute of Media Studies. He has published over 100 essays and reviews and two books including Communication as Culture (Routledge, 1989).
Graciela Chichilnisky
Graciela Chichilnisky is Professor of Economics at Columbia. She co-founded Financial Tele-communications Ltd. (FITEL - an international telecommunications firm) with Geoffrey Heal, and served as its Chairperson and Chief Executive. She is currently working on a decentralized tele-communications system for global custody of international securities. Her most recent books, co-authored with Geoffrey Heal, are The Evolving International Economy and Oil in the International Economy.
Nelson Fraiman
Read Professor Fraiman's bio by clicking here.
Herbert J. Gans
Herbert J. Gans is Robert S. Lynd Professor of Sociology at Columbia University. His publications include The Urban Villagers; Popular Culture and High Culture; Deciding What's News; and Middle American Individualism: The Future of Liberal Democracy. He has also authored the monographs American Films and TV Programs on British Screens: The Functions of American Popular Culture Abroad, and The Uses of Television and Their Educational Implications. Professor Gans is past-President of the American Sociological Association and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Jane Ginsburg
Faculty Research AssociateJane Ginsburg is Morton L. Janklow Professor of Literary and Artistic Property Law at Columbia Law School. Her principal areas of interest are in intellectual property, comparative law, and legal methods. She served as law clerk to Judge John J. Gibbons, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Publications include three casebooks: Legal Methods: Cases and Materials (1996); Copyright for the Nineties (with Gorman, 4th ed., 1993) and Trademark and Unfair Competition Law (with Litman, Goldberg, and Greenbaum, 2nd ed., 1996) as well as a variety of law review articles. Ginsburg serves on the editorial boards of The Michie Co., law school publishers, and of several intellectual property journals in the United States and abroad. She holds a. BA from the University of Chicago, an MA and JD from Harvard, and a D.E.A. and a Doctor of Law from Université de Paris.
Bruce Greenwald
Read Professor Greenwald's bio by clicking here.
Kathryn Harrigan
Read Professor Harrigan's bio by clicking here.
Geoffrey Heal
Affiliate Faculty ResearcherRead Professor Heal's bio by clicking here.
Morris Holbrook
William T. Dillard Professor of Marketing Faculty Research AssociateRead Professor Holbrook's bio by clicking here.
Aurel Lazar
Faculty Research AssociateAurel Lazar has been a Professor of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University since 1988. He is founder and leader of the COMET Group of the Center for Telecommunications Research at Columbia University. He was the chief architect of two experimental networks, generically called MAGNET. This work introduced traffic classes with explicit quality of service constrains to broadband switching and led to the concepts of schedulable, admissible load and contract regions in real-time control of broadband networks. He is currently leading the COMET project on the foundations of the real-time control and management architecture of multimedia networks. His management and control research pioneered the application of virtual reality to the management of ATM-based broadband networks. Lazar is an IEEE Fellow (1993); a member of the editorial board, Journal of Multimedia Tools and Applications, Kluwer; editor of Multimedia Systems, ACM/Spring Verlag; member of the editorial board, Telecommunications Systems, Baltzer; editor, Telecommunication Networks and Computer Systems (Monograph Series), Springer-Verlag, New York.
Robert McClintock
Faculty Research AssociateRobert McClintock is a Professor of History and Education. He is also Co-Director of the Institute for Learning Technologies. He is an expert on the applications of digital technology to educational reform, study of Western cultural tradition, urban education, and the history of pedagogy. His selected publications include: Power and Pedagogy: Transforming Education Through Information Technology (Educational Technology Publications). Man and His Circumstances: Ortega as Educator (Teachers College Press). Educating America for the 21st Century: A Strategic Plan for Educational Leadership (Institute for Learning Technologies). Computing and Education: The Second Frontier (Teachers College Press).
Richard R. Nelson
Richard R. Nelson is Henry R. Luce Professor of International Political Economy at Columbia University. His research has concentrated on the processes of long-run economic change, with particular emphasis on technological advances and on the evolution of economic institutions. His recent publications include "R & D, Knowledge, and Externalities: An Approach to the Puzzle of Disparate Productivity Growth Rates Among Manufacturing Industries," "Firm and Industry Response to Changed Market Conditions: An Evolutionary Approach," and "Technical Advance and Productivity Growth: Retrospect, Prospect, and Policy Issues."
Hugh Patrick
Read Professor Patrick's bio by clicking here.
John V. Pavlik
Faculty Research AssociateJohn V. Pavlik is the executive director of The Center for New Media at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, where he is also a professor. He is a senior fellow of the San Diego Supercomputer Center. Previously, he served as the founding director of the School of Communication at San Diego State University. He is the former associate director for Research and Technology Studies at The Freedom Forum Media Studies Center at Columbia University. Pavlik's books include New Media Technology: Cultural and Commercial Perspectives, second edition published in 1998 by Allyn & Bacon. Pavlik has also authored more than a dozen computer software packages for education in journalism and communication, including "Fire!" and "Fatal!" Pavlik holds a Ph.D. and an M.A. in mass communication from the University of Minnesota. He was graduated in 1978 from the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Mischa Schwartz
Faculty Research AssociateMischa Schwartz joined the Electrical Engineering faculty in 1974. He is the author and co-author of eight books in communication systems, computer and telecommunications networks, and signal processing. His current research focuses on lightwave networks of the future, fault management, and access/flow control in broadband integrated networks. He is a Fellow and former Director of the IEEE, past President of the IEEE Communications Society, and past Chairman of the IEEE Group on Information Theory. He was the 1983 recipient of the IEEE Education Medal and received the Cooper Union Gano Dunn Award in 1986 for outstanding achievement in Science and Technology.
Bernd Schmitt
Faculty Research AssociateRead Professor Schmitt's bio by clicking here.
Robert Y. Shapiro
Robert Y. Shapiro is Associate Professor of Political Science at Columbia. His research examines the theories of democratic policy making; he recently completed The Rational Public: Fifty Years of Trends in Americans' Policy Preferences (with Benjamin I. Page). His papers on public opinion and its relationship with policy have appeared in the American Political Science Review, Policy Studies Journal, Journal of Conflict Resolution, and (with L. Jacobs) Social Science History.
Michael Van Biema
Assistant Professor of Finance & Economics and Computer Science Faculty Research FellowMichael van Biema joined the faculty in 1992 and is currently directing a program for the study of technology and productivity at Columbia University which is funded in part by the Alfred Sloan Foundation. His current research involves understanding the effects technology on productivity in the service sector of the economy. He is conducting a number of individual case studies along with other member of the faculty on several communications users and providers. He is member of the faculty of both the Columbia Business School's Finance Division, and the School of Engineering's, Department of Computer Science.
Alan F. Westin
Alan F. Westin is Professor of Public Law and Government with Columbia University's Department of Political Science. His main areas of research address privacy, office automation, and employee fair procedure/EEO issues, and the use of new information technologies to expand the distribution of public information to citizens and the voluntary sector. For the past three years he served as the academic advisor for national public and leadership surveys on privacy. He has authored or edited 26 books including The Changing Workplace: A Guide to the People, Organizations, and Regulatory Aspects of Office Technology; Individual Rights in the Corporation: A Reader on Employee Rights; and Computers, Health Care, and Citizen Rights: Report of the Project on Medical Records and Citizen Rights.
Yechiam Yemini
Faculty Research AssociateYechiam Yemini is a Professor of computer science at Columbia University where he founded and directs the Distributed Computing and Communications (DCC) lab. His research interests include computer networks, network management, economics of information systems, distributed systems and protocols. He has authored over 150 publications, hold 5 patents, and has lectured widely in these areas. Technologies created at the DCC lab have been widely exported to thousands of sites and commercialized by several companies. Yemini is a co-founder of Comverse Technology Inc, a $3.5 billion leading vendor of multi-media message computers for telecom networks. He is also a co-founder and Director of System Management Arts, Inc., a leading technology vendor of software that automates root-cause diagnosis of network problems. Yemini serves as a director of several high-tech companies, advises a major venture fund on high-tech investments, and serves on the US-Israel Science & Technology Commission.
David Allen
David Allen’s abiding passion is to help gather world community, and so global perspective, for the research intellectuals who work on questions of communications policy. Such newly global research complements policy makers who already convene regionally and globally. To this end, he has bent his efforts to a new initiative that will catalyze a worldwide perspective for research and also underpin effective interworking with policy makers – a World Collaboration for communications policy research. He is co-principal with others around the globe.
The current half of David Allen’s life has been in communications policy research, around the world. He created the Global Communications Industries Program at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government in the early ‘90s. Previously for going on a decade he was a member of MIT’s Research Program on Communications Policy. He is pleased to be Affiliated Research Fellow, Columbia Institute for Tele-Information at Columbia University. Allen has been Co-Editor of the journal, Information Economics and Policy. His memberships include the Schumpeter Society and the Pacific Telecommunications Council.
In the earlier half of his life, David Allen worked a decade in business starting new ventures. During this time he was also Controller for a US federal grant in the office of the Mayor of Boston. His degrees are from Harvard.
Huseyin Bayazit
Senior Affiliated Research FellowHuseyin Bayazit has over 25 years of experince in media, entertainment, communication and IT industries and currently sits at the executive board of various companies. Mr. Bayazit joined CITI in January 1990 as the International Research Coordinator, later acted as the Director of Virtual Institute of Information and affiliated senior research fellow and advisor. While at the Institute he conducted and published numerous research articles on domestic and international topics in media, entertainment and telecommunications and served international and domestic companies, The World Bank, UNDP, OECD, government agencies and others as a consultant. He has been a lecturer at MBA and graduate programs in various universities. Currently at CITI, Mr. Bayazit has undertaken a project as managing director in the international media and entertainment industries. He holds graduate degrees from Columbia University.
Michael Botein
Michael Botein is founding Director of the Communications Media Center at New York University Law School and former co-Director of CTIS at Columbia. His expertise lies in international telecommunications law, the regulation of cable television and new technologies. He has been consultant to the FCC and the Administrative Conference of the United States. He has been Visiting Professor of the Faculte de Droit, University of Melbourne Law School, and at Hebrew University School of Law. He is widely published in the field and co-author of International Telecommunications in the United States (1987) and Cases and Materials on Regulation of the Electronic Mass Media (forthcoming).
John Carey
John Carey is director of the telecommunications consulting firm Greystone Communications. His current research focuses on broadband telecommunication networks and interactive television. Recent publications include: "Plato At the Keyboard: Telecommunications Technology and Education Policy," "How Communication Technologies Enter American Households," "A Public Television Manager's Guide To Fiber Optics and Other New Communication Technologies," and "Interactive Media in the 1990s."
Kenneth R. Carter
Kenneth Carter is a Senior Consultant at wik-Consult GmbH,
where he is a key member of the firm's newly formed NGN and Internet Economics
Department. The Department advises both private- and public-sector
clients on emerging issues or issues of first impression which cross
traditionally-defined industries and classifications. Mr. Carter has
provided assessments of economics, business strategy and regulatory policy
regarding: interconnection; spectrum policy; security; and
convergence. As a lawyer-turned-MBA, his work applies the principles and
tools of Management Science to the process of regulation and rulemaking.
Recently, Mr. Carter has served on an International Advisory Forum on Next
Generation Networks in the
Douglas A. Conn
Douglas A. Conn is currently Vice President and Senior Analyst, Citibank, NA, working in the media, entertainment and telecommunications industries. He joined CITI in January 1987 as Assistant Director and became Associate Director in 1990. Upon leaving the Institute in 1992, he joined Teleport Communications Group where he was Manager in Corporate Development and Finance. He also has founded and operated a company in the music/video industry. While at the Institute he conducted and published numerous research articles on domestic and international topics in telecommunications and information networks. He is co-editor of "Telecommunications in the Pacific Basin" (Oxford, 1994). Conn holds a BS in Communications from Northwestern University, an MA from the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania and an MBA from Columbia Business School. He has attended telecommunications programs at Syracuse University of London and at the Annenberg Washington Program.
Mark Cooper
William Drake
As of July 2003, William J. Drake directs the Project on the Information Revolution and Global Governance in Geneva, Switzerland. Supported by the Open Society Institute, the project is assessing the global governance of information and communication technology with special reference to public interest implications and the role of civil society organizations. He is also a Senior Associate at the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development in Geneva; a Research Associate of the Institute for Tele-Information at Columbia University; co-editor of the new MIT Press book series, The Information Revolution and Global Politics; and an elected member (2003-2006) of the Board of Directors of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR). Other relevant current activities include: member, CPSR's delegation to the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS); organizer, CPSR's WSIS side-event on "Global Governance of ICT: Public Interest Considerations;" member, Social Science Research Council's Network on ICT Governance and Transnational Civil Society; and member, editorial boards of the journals Telecommunications Policy and Info.
Previously, Dr. Drake has been: Visiting Senior Fellow, the Center for International Development and Conflict Management, University of Maryland, College Park; Senior Associate and founding Director of the Project on the Information Revolution and World Politics, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; founding Associate Director of the Communication, Culture and Technology Program, Georgetown University; an Assistant Professor of Communication at the University of California, San Diego; and an adjunct professor at both the School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University and at the School of Business, Georgetown University. In addition, he has been an American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow; a Ford Fellow in European Society and Western Security, and a MacArthur Fellow in International Security Studies, at the Center for International Affairs, Harvard University; and an Albert Gallatin Fellow at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva, Switzerland. He has been a member of the U.S. delegations to two intergovernmental conferences and of various international initiatives. The latter includes World Economic Forum's Global Digital Divide Task Force, for which he prepared recommendations to the July 2000 summit of the G-8 heads of state and to the DOT Force.
Among his publications are: Toward Sustainable Competition in Global Telecommunications: From Principle to Practice---Summary Report of the Third Aspen Institute Roundtable on International Telecommunications (Aspen Institute, 1999); and the edited volumes, Governing Global Electronic Networks: International Perspectives on Policy and Power (MIT Press, forthcoming in 2004, with Ernest J. Wilson III); Telecommunications in the Information Age (United States Information Agency, 1998), and The New Information Infrastructure: Strategies for US Policy (Twentieth Century Fund, 1995). He received his M.A., M.Phil, and Ph.D. in Political Science from Columbia.
Nicholas S. Economides
Nicholas S. Economides is Associate Professor with the Department of Economics at the Stern Business School at New York University. His current research examines issues of compatibility and standardization, the creation of shared networks, bundling, and vertical and horizontal product differentiation. He has also taught at Columbia and Stanford, and is widely published in academic and trade journals.
Bruce L. Egan
Senior Affiliated Research FellowBruce L. Egan is an economist and Senior Affiliated Research Fellow, Columbia Institute for Tele-Information (CITI), Columbia University, New York. He was appointed by the Governor of Wyoming to the Wyoming Telecommunications Council (2003-2007). The Council objective is to implement a statewide universal broadband access policy. He was a founding Director (1999-2001) and Chairman of the Board of Election.com, an election services company, and co-founder and Director of Everest Communications, a broadband wireless start-up. He was adjunct professor in the Executive MBA Program at Columbia University Graduate School of Business (1996) and from 1996-1998 was Executive Vice President of INDETEC International, a business consulting firm specializing in media and telecommunications. Mr. Egan has over 25 years of experience in economic and policy analysis of telecommunications in both industry and academia. Before joining CITI in 1988, he was an economist at Bellcore since 1983, and at Southwestern Bell Telephone Company from 1976 to 1983. Mr. Egan has published numerous articles in books and journals on telecommunications costing, pricing and public policy. He has been a consultant to several Fortune 500 companies, the U.S. Congress, European Community, United Nations, OECD and others. His research concentration is public policy and economics of technology adoption in telecommunications and he has written two books on the subject titled, Information Superhighways Revisited: The Economics of Multimedia (Artech House, Norwood MA 1997) and Information Superhighways: The Economics of Advanced Communication Networks (1990).
Michael A. Einhorn
Michael
A. Einhorn is an economic consultant and testifying expert active in the areas
of intellectual property, media,
entertainment, licensing, valuation, and antitrust, as well as a professor of
corporate entrepreneurship at the Rothman Institute of Entrepreneurial Studies
at
He has worked at Bell Laboratories, consulted to Argonne National Laboratories, the World Bank, and Telcordia, advised on matters related to wireless technologies, and assisted in litigation related to semiconductors and medical technologies. As a copyright damages expert, he has consulted to inventors, publishers, songwriters, composers, cartoonists, sculptors, photographers, architects, artists, record labels, movie producers. and screenwriters. He has testified, counseled, published articles, or lectured in music rights, fair use, data mining, royalties, damages, hyperlinking, file-sharing, and digital rights management.
He
received a Ph.D. in Economics from
Ph.
Martin C.J. Elton
Affiliated ResearcherMartin C.J. Elton was Director of the Institute and Visiting Professor at Columbia Business School between July 1987 and January 1990. He has returned to NYU as Professor of Communications in the Tisch School of the Arts where he has taught since 1979, and remains affiliated with the Institute. His research has concentrated primarily on evaluation, planning and policy development for emerging telecommunications and information services. He serves on the editorial board of Telecommunications Policy and was a member of the National Research Council's Subcommittee on Space Communications Research and Development. He has acted as principal investigator of studies sponsored by the National Science Foundation, AT&T, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and many other agencies and corporations in the USA, Canada, and Europe. He has published widely in the field. His books include the edited volumes Integrated Broadband Networks: The Public Policy Issues and Evaluating and Planning New Telecommunications Services.
Valerie Feldmann
Affiliated ResearcherValerie Feldmann is an associate with McKinsey & Company in New York. Prior to that she has served as a telecom policy consultant at the Strategy and Policy Unit (SPU) of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), Geneva, and as an adjunct faculty member at the Free University Berlin. Valerie is a managing editor of the European Communication Council (ECC) as well as a fellow of the Alcatel SEL Foundation. She joined CITI as visiting doctoral fellow in 2000 as a scholar of the Fulbright Commission and the German National Academic Foundation and has served as managing editor for the second Transatlantic Dialogue between CITI and the European Institute for the Media (EIM).
Valerie holds a Master of Science in Business Management and a Master of Art in Media Communications, both from the University of Muenster, Germany, as well as a PhD in Media Communications from the Free University Berlin.
Selected publications:
Feldmann, Valerie (2005): Leveraging mobile media. Cross-media strategy and innovation policy for mobile media communication, Heidelberg: Physica (forthcoming).
European Communication Council (2005): E-merging media. Communication and the media economy of the future. Edited by Axel Zerdick, Arnold Picot, Jean-Claude Burgelman, Roger Silverstone, Valerie Feldmann, Christian Wernick, Carolin Wolff, Berlin: Springer.
http://www.springeronline.com/sgw/cda/frontpage/0,11855,1-40109-22-35099401-0,00.html
Feldmann, Valerie/ Muehlfeld, Katrin (Eds.) (2005): Virtual worlds of precision. Computer-based simulations in science and social science, Berlin: Lit (forthcoming).
http://www.lit-verlag.de/isbn/3-8258-6773-0
ITU (2003): Mobile overtakes fixed: implications for policy and regulation. Authored by Valerie Feldmann under the ITU New Initiatives Programme,
ITU (2003): Competition policy in telecommunications. Edited by Valerie Feldmann under the ITU New Initiatives Programme, http://www.itu.int/itudoc/gs/promo/gs/83217.pdf
Feldmann, Valerie (2002): Competitive strategy for media companies in the mobile Internet, in: Schmalenbach Business Review (54), October 2002: pp. 351-371, http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=349433
ITU (2002): Asia-Pacific Telecommunication Indicators 2002 http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/publications/asia/2002/flyer.html Feldmann, Valerie (2000): Markenstrategien von TV-Sendern [Branding strategies of TV-channels], Berlin: VfW http://www.kpmg.de/industries/ice/index_3098.htm
Richard L. Field
Affiliated Researcher Richard L. Field's legal practice encompasses financial systems, electronic commerce law and policy, and emerging technology issues. He is the immediate past chair of the American Bar Association Section of Science & Technology Law, and is past chair of its Electronic Commerce Payment Committee and its Coordinating Committee on International Policy. He was instrumental in establishing relations between the Section and the Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe (CCBE), as well as with the IT/High-tech Legal Committee of the All-China Bar Association. He has chaired the Committee on Banking of the New York County Lawyers' Association, and is a member of the National Conference of Lawyers and Scientists, a joint project of the ABA and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Mr. Field serves on the United States delegation to the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law, as well as its Working Group on Electronic Commerce. He has been called upon frequently as an expert advisor to the UNCITRAL Secretariat on technology law matters. In addition to assisting the Private International Law Advisory Committee, U.S. Department of State in these areas, Mr. Field has also assisted the European Parliament in its study of electronic payment systems and commerce, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan on issues of network security, the OECD on consumer authentication, and the Korean Institute of Technology and the Law as an International Advisor. He was a participant in the Electronic Commerce Project of the ICC.
A member of the American Law Institute, Mr. Field was an advisor to the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Law project to revise the U.S. payment laws of the Uniform Commercial Code. He co-authored the ABA's Model EDI Payments Agreement (1992) and was a contributor to its Digital Signature Guidelines (1996).
Mr. Field is an Affiliated Research Fellow of the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information (CITI), and has been an Adjunct Professor of Electronic Finance at Columbia University Graduate School of Business. A former in-house advanced technology and payment counsel at Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company and at Morgan Guaranty Trust Company, Mr. Field holds undergraduate degrees in applied mathematics and engineering from Brown University, and a J.D. from New York University.
Alain de Fontenay
Alain de Fontenay is principal with T.E.L.A. Group where he continues his specialization on the economics of telecommunications. He has also worked at Bellcore, where he was named Distinguished Member of Technical Staff, and the Canadian Government. His present focus is industrial organization applied to network-based firms with an emphasis on the link between the evolution of technology, services, competition, and regulation. He is a board member and co-founder of the International Telecommunications Society (ITS), a member of Communications & Strategies' Scientific Committee, and an associate editor of Information, Economics, and Policy.
John Friedman
John K. Friedman, is president, chief operating officer and a director of Sonus Communication Holdings, Inc., a facilities-based competitive local exchange carrier, long distance carrier and Internet/data services provider headquartered in New York City. Mr. Friedman, began working in the telecommunications industry in 1982 as a cable television plant installer. From 1986-1989, Mr. Friedman joined the Office of the Majority Leader in the New York State Assembly, the Assembly Office of Management and Budget as a data communications analyst for the Assembly's state-wide voice and data network and Century Communications, a large multiple systems cable television operator. During his three year tenure at Century, Mr. Friedman became interested in the telecommunications industry's growth potential which led him to pursue a law degree with a concentration in telecommunications. He received a JD degree from Yeshiva University/Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in 1994. While in law school, Mr. Friedman conducted extensive research into the FCC's licensing practices for emerging telecommunications technologies and published a law journal article on that subject and on personal communications services.
At that time, along with Paul Butler, Mr. Friedman founded Empire One Telecommunications, a switchless reseller of long distance services to targeted ethnic communities in the US, which he served as chairman of the board of directors and CEO. During 1995, Mr. Friedman served as the associate director of the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information at Columbia University's Graduate School of Business. At the Institute, he was responsible for the day-to-day operations of the oldest, independent think-tank devoted to issues regarding telecommunications and computing policy, regulation and economics.
Since January 1996, Mr. Friedman has devoted all his time to running Empire One and its successor, Sonus Communication Holdings, Inc. which acquired Empire One in March 2000. At Sonus he is responsible for the overall day-to-day operations of the company and oversees its telecommunications and financial regulatory compliance efforts. He is a Senior Affiliated Research Fellow with the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information, and serves on the Telecommunications Law Committee of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. Mr. Friedman is a frequent speaker on telecommunications marketing and policy, and also serves as the secretary and treasurer of the board of directors of the Targeted Accessibility Fund of New York. Mr. Friedman holds a BA in political science from the State University of New York at Albany (1986) and JD from the Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University (1994). He is a member of the New York State bar
David Gabel
David Gabel is Associate Professor with the Department of Economics at Queens College. His current research concerns the economics of regulation, cost-allocation procedures, the pricing of telecommunications services, as well as the origin and continued need to regulate the telephone industry. He has worked for the Wisconsin and Massachusetts Public Service Commissions as well as AT&T.
Min Hang
Email: hangmin@tsinghua.edu.cn, min.hang@ihh.hj.se
Min Hang is
currently working at the
Thomas W. Hazlett
Senior Research AssociateThomas W. Hazlett is an Associate Professor of Agricultural Economics at UC Davis and teaches economics and public policy. He previously served as Chief Economist at the FCC, and was a Visiting Fellow at the Institute in 1990-91. Hazlett has conducted extensive research in the area of government regulation and legal institutions, specializing in public policy of broadcasting and cable television. His articles have appeared in numerous journals in the fields of economics, law, regulation, public policy, broadcasting, and electronic media. He is also widely published in a number of general interest periodicals. Hazlett has delivered expert testimony on cable television regulation before governmental bodies and several federal courts, and was awarded the 1990 Wriston/Citicorp Fellowship by the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research.
Heather Hudson
Visiting Scholar in ResidenceProfessor Heather E. Hudson is Director of the Telecommunications Management and Policy Program in the School of Business and Management at the University of San Francisco.
Heather received an Honours B.A. in English from the University of British Columbia, M.A. and Ph.D. in Communication Research from Stanford University, and J.D. from the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author of several books on Telecommunications and published more than 100 articles and presented numerous conference papers and expert testimony on telecommunications applications and domestic and international policy issues.
Heather has planned and evaluated communication projects in northern Canada, Alaska, and more than 50 developing countries in Asia and the Pacific, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America. She has also consulted for government agencies, consumer and native organizations, foreign governments, telecommunications companies, and international.
Heather received several scholarships including a Fulbright Distinguished Lectureship for the Asia/Pacific in 1996 and 1997.
Heather is a Governor of the International Council for Computer Communications (ICCC) and has been a member of the board of the Pacific Telecommunications Council and the Telecommunications Policy Research Conference. She serves on the editorial boards of Telecommunications Policy, Space Communications, and the Pacific Telecommunications Review. She has been a member of Advisory Committees of the National Research Council, the Federal Communications Commission, the Department of Commerce and the Office of Technology Assessment, and was a special advisor to the International Commission on Worldwide Telecommunications Development (the Maitland Commission)
John Kasdan
John Kasdan is Lecturer of Law at Columbia's Law School. His teaching specializes in computers and the law, intellectual property, and antitrust issues. His research has concentrated on the economics of intellectual property, antitrust, and complex analysis. Kasdan is currently developing CITI projects on encryption and copyrights.
Michael Koenig
Michael Koenig is Dean and Professor at the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at Rosary College in Illinois. He has formerly taught at Columbia's School of Library Service. His principal research interests concern the impact of information systems upon productivity, and the applications of information retrieval technology and methodology within the business environment. He has published numerous works, including "Information and Information Technology Management: Converging Concerns and Literature" in the Annual Review of Information Science and Technology.
Matthias Kurth
Senior Affiliated ResearcherPresident, Regulatory Authority for Telecommunications and Posts Germany
Matthias Kurth is the President of the Regulatory Authority for Telecommunications and Posts in Germany. Before joining the Regulatory Authority, he served as Director of New Business Development for COLT Telekom GmbH. He has served as a representative of the state of Hesse in the Regulatory council of posts and Telecommunications, where he participated in the framing of the Telecommunications Act. He began his career as a judge at the Darmstadt Regional Court after studying law and Economics at Frankfurt am Main University, and taking postgraduate legal training in the administration of justice of the state of Hesse.
William H. Lehr
Assistant Professor of Finance and EconomicsFaculty Research Associate
William Lehr is Assistant Professor at Columbia Business School. His current research examines effects of rapid technological change on strategic behavior, compatibility standardization and productivity. His work also addresses microeconomics of industrial organization, regulation and competitive strategy with special attention to the computer, telecommunications and media industries. Lehr holds undergraduate and masters degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania, and an MBA from the Wharton School of Business. He received his PhD in economics from Stanford. Major publications and papers include "Quality and Reliability of Telecommunications Infrastructure" (forthcoming), "Standardization: Understanding the Process"; "Journal of the American Society of Information Science", "Voluntary Standard Setting, Institutions and the Allocation of Technical Capabilities", "ISDN and the Small User: Regulatory Policy Issues," with R. Noll, Integrated Broadband Networks: The Public Policy Issues.
Jonathan Liebenau
Jonathan Liebenau is a Reader in Technology Management in the Information Systems and Innovation Group of the Department of Management of the London School of Economics, and head of the research group "Technology Innovation: Management, Economics & Policy."
Dr. Liebenau was a former visiting scholar at CITI and is involved in research projects at the Institute with Dr. James Alleman and Alain Bourdeau de Fontenay. Dr. Liebenau was previously the Director of Industry Studies at the Technical Change Centre, a government-linked think tank in London, and he headed research projects within the Business History Unit and Department of Economic History on high technology industries at LSE. He has conducted research in the area of telecommunications policy, with emphasis on transfer of technology, information infrastructure policy, and regulatory reform and liberalization of the European markets. He has also written on fundamental concepts of information management, as applied to problems such as decision support, temporality and transaction costs. His current research is on concepts of information infrastructure at levels ranging from the organization to national and international cooperative policies.
Dr. Liebenau’s personal website
Bruce Lincoln
Bruce Lincoln is an educational
technologist, a design scientist and a multimedia designer/developer. Bruce
is the Founder and Chief Design Scientist of the Urban Cyberspace Company. The Urban Cyberspace Company is a design consulting and
marketing firm specializing in broadband Internet technologies. Under the umbrella of Urban Cyberspace, Bruce
was responsible for the design of the Internet technologies used in 1400on5th.com, the first smart and green
building in
Gary Madden
Professor Madden’s primary research area is the economic modeling of electronic networks. Within this gambit his particular research
fields encompass theoretically motivated short time-series forecasting, the
economics of disruptive technologies, digital divide issues, network
externalities and Internet evolution, and the welfare impact of economic
growth. He is the author of 78 peer-reviewed publications in these fields since
1993 and has attracted over $1m to the University for his research since 1994.
In particular, Gary is Chief Investigator on four ARC Discovery Project (Large)
grants since 1998. He is a consultant to government and a Member of the Board
of Directors of the International Telecommunications Society. Gary is currently
Associate Editor of the International Journal of Management and Network
Economics, and Editorial Board Member of The Open Communication Science Journal
and the Journal of Media Economics. Gary is a Member of the Scientific Council
of Communications & Strategies. Professor Madden spent 2006 at The Columbia Institute for Tele-Information as a visiting scholar.
Thomas McKnight
Affiliated Research FellowThomas McKnight is a developer of telecommunications and media business with credentials as an engineer, registered financial consultant, and a licensed attorney specializing in entrepreneurial enterprises. From 1982-1986, Mr. McKnight was CEO of Orion Satellite Corporation, a firm he co-founded to compete with Intelsat. He was part of the founding teams at USA TODAY and the start-up PTAT system, a privately owned transatlantic fiber optic submarine cable that he sold to U.S. Sprint. He has staff experience in telecommunications and media policy-making with the White House and the FCC. He has also participated in other entrepreneurial ventures in Bulgaria, China, Czech Republic, Hungary, Kuwait and Poland.
Stephen Messer
Affiliated Research FellowStephen Messer joined the Institute in 1996. He received a B.A. in Government and Law with a minor in history from Lafayette College graduating a Phi Alpha Theta Scholar. He received a Juris doctorate from the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. Prior to coming to the Institute he served for the United States Mission to the United Nations on the sixth committee and closed sessions of the Security Council during the Forty-Ninth General Assembly. His studies and work dealt with the growth of the Internet for three years prior to joining the Institute. He directed the Virtual Institute of Information until April 1997. His current project is Link Share.
Áine NíShéilleabháin
Affiliated Research FellowÁine NíShéilleabháin's research focuses on modeling term structures of defaultable bonds, and on continuous-time diffusion processes that capture predictability in the underlying. She is former Director, Quantitative and Credit Analytics of a large British bank where she led quantitative modeling and pricing of credit risk, as well as risk management at the portfolio level. As CITI's Associate Director she published several academic articles on telecommunications, analyst reports on technology (McGraw-Hill/Northern Business Information), and co-edited the volume Private Networks, Public Objectives (Elsevier Science Press, 1996). Áine completed doctoral coursework in Finance at INSEAD, and holds Masters and undergraduate degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and Dublin City University.
Lorenzo Pupillo
Affiliated ResearcherDr. Lorenzo Maria Pupillo is an Executive Director in the Public Affairs Unit of Telecom Italia and Affiliated Researcher at Columbia Institute for Tele-Information. In Telecom Italia, he is in charge of the Economics of Public Strategies. He is an economist by training and has worked in many areas of telecommunications demand and regulatory analysis, publishing papers in applied econometrics and industrial organization. He has also been Advisor to the Global Information and Communication Technologies Department of the World Bank in Washington and adjunct Professor of Economics of ICTs at University of Rome, La Sapienza. Before joining Telecom Italia in 1992, he was member of technical staff at AT&T Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey. He earned a Ph.D. and an M.A. from University of Pennsylvania, an MBA from Instituto Adriano Olivetti in Ancona Italy and a MS in Mathematics from University of Rome.
Paul Rappoport
Paul Rappoport is Associate Professor of Economics at Temple University. He has over 25 years of experience in data analysis, modeling and statistical assessment, with a specialization in telecommunications demand analysis. He was responsible for the development of Bill Harvestingä, a national database of actual communications bills, a small business panel - which focuses on telecommunications and energy - and a large consumer national telecommunication database. His current research work is focused on modeling Internet demand, network externalities and competitive analysis. He received his Ph.D. from The Ohio State University in 1974.
David J. Salant
David Salant is a founder of Optimal Markets, Incorporated. Dr. Salant has held faculty and research positions at GTE Laboratories, Incorporated, Bell Laboratories, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and the State University of New York at Buffalo. He was previously a Senior Vice President in the Telecommunications Practice at National Economic Research Associates and a Managing Director in the Telecommunication and Auction Practice at the Law and Economics Consulting Group. At GTE Labs and also more recently at the Math Science Research Center of Bell Labs, Dr. Salant was engaged in developing economic simulation models of wireless networks. He recently edited a special issue of The Journal of Regulatory Economics on Auctions and Regulation. His publications include "Auctions and Regulation: Reengineering of Regulatory Mechanisms," introduction to special issue on Auctions and Regulation, Journal of Regulatory Economics, and "Up in the Air: GTE's Experience in The MTA Auction for PCS Licenses." Journal of Economics and Management Strategy.
He has over 15 years of telecommunications experience. He has been the primary bid strategist for winning bidders in spectrum auctions in Australia, Austria, Brazil, Canada, Germany, Mexico, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States. He has also assisted regulatory agencies in Australia, Canada, Colombia, Guatemala, Israel, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Peru, Singapore and the United States in the design and implementation of spectrum auctions.
He has a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Rochester with a concentration in Game Theory, and an A.B. in Economics and Mathematics, Magna Cum Laude from Washington University.
Michael Salinger
Michael Salinger is Associate Professor at Boston University. He is a leading expert on the economics of cable television. His research on cable television has covered such topics as the effects of vertical integration between cable networks and cable operators, the effects of cable deregulation, and the prospects for competition between cable and telephone companies. He has published articles in the Micro-Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, and The Rand Journal.
Jorge Reinan Schement
Jorge Reinan Schement is Associate Professor at the School of Communication, Information, and Library Science at Rutgers University. He received a Fulbright Research Grant in the summer of 1986 to study patterns of distribution for information occupations and information workers in Finland. His books include Telecommunications Policy Handbook; Competing Visions, Complex Realities; Social Aspects of the Information Society; Between Communications and Tendecies and Tensions of the Information Age.
Harumasa Sato
Affiliated ResearcherHarumasa Sato is Professor of Economics at Konan University in Kobe, Japan. He teaches applied micro-economics, the economics of regulation, and telecommunications economics. He is a former Fulbright Scholar, and visited MIT's Department of Economics during 1989-90. As the Institute's Representative in Japan, Sato is the liaison between the Institute and Japanese universities, companies, and government, and assists CITI research on Japanese and Pacific Basin telecommunications. He is currently a Visiting Scholar at CITI, and was previously in the years 1994-1995, and 1990.
J.H. Snider
J.H. Snider is a Fellow at the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and Public Policy, located at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and the President of iSolon.org, a non-profit institute whose purpose is to bring paradigm changing ideas on the policy implications of new information technologies to the fore of public discussion. In 2001 he co-founded the Spectrum Policy Program at the New America Foundation, a Washington-DC-based think tank, where he served as a fellow and research director from 2001-2007. Prior to that, he was an American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow in Communications and Public Policy, a University Fellow at Northwestern University, and Senior Research Assistant at the Harvard Business School. His works on information policy include Future Shop: How New Technologies Will Change the Way We Shop and What We Buy (St. Martin?s, 1992), the Citizen’s Guide to the Airwaves (New America Foundation 2003), and The Art of Spectrum Lobbying: America's $480 Billion Spectrum Giveaway, How it Happened, and How to Prevent it from Recurring (New America Foundation 2007). He holds a Ph.D. in American Government from Northwestern University, an MBA from the Harvard Business School, and an AB from Harvard College.
Dan Steinbock
Dan Steinbock is Visiting Virtual Professor at the Department of Management and Organization, and Department of Marketing at the Helsinki School of Economics and Business Administration (HSEBA). His research focuses on dynamic strategy, marketing and globalization.
Johannes Tyrell
Joost van Dreunen
Joost van Dreunen studies video games as an entryway into contemporary media culture. His academic work focuses on the intersection between user-created game modifications and online communities. Joost is an affiliate researcher at the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information, a member of the Center for Organizational Innovation and the founder of the New York chapter for the Digital Games Research Association.
Outside academia Joost is involved in a variety of projects, and works as a games analyst for companies such as DFC Intelligence and Nielsen Online. He is currently in the midst of a report on the business models of online game portals.
Joost lives in New York with his wife Janelle, and maintains a blog at www.waffler.org
Harold Vogel
Affiliated Researcher Harold L. Vogel is the author of Entertainment Industry Economics: A Guide for Financial Analysis (Fifth Edition) and of the companion volume, Travel Industry Economics: A Guide for Financial Analysis, both published by Cambridge University Press in 2001. He was ranked as top entertainment industry analyst for a record ten years by Institutional Investor magazine and was the senior entertainment industry analyst at Merrill Lynch for seventeen years. A chartered financial analyst (C.F.A.), Mr. Vogel served on the New York State Governor's Motion Picture and Television Advisory Board and as an adjunct professor of media economics at Columbia University's Graduate School of Business. He is currently a venture capitalist and fund manager specializing in early stage investments in media and entertainment and aviation and is based in New York. He is also a corporate director of NearWare Networks and Cavalcade Media and is on the advisory board of Rightsline, Inc. and several other companies.
Len Waverman
Timothy Wendt
Affiliated Research FellowTimothy Wendt is a former Director of Industry Analysis for New York State Industrial Cooperation Council, where he designed and organized economic development strategies for New York's telecommunications and electronic industries. Wendt is author of the Commission Studies: Giving Up the Edge: The US Telecommunications Industry in International Competition; America's Steel Industry: A Time to Act, and several related publications. Wendt is former Executive Director of a PBS Television and radio affiliate. He completed his undergraduate degree from Brown University and received his graduate degree from the Columbia University School of International Affairs.
Alex Wolfson