| Professor Zoltan Acs delivered
the keynote address, “On the
Leading Edge of SME/Entrepreneurship
Research—Issues and Global
Trends,” at the Small and Medium
Enterprise/Entrepreneurship Research
Challenges in Egypt Workshop in Cairo.
The April event was organized by
the Ministry of Finance/Small and
Medium Enterprise Policy Project
and Economic Research Forum. Also
in April, Acs discussed “Why
Does Entrepreneurship Matter?” at
the Entrepreneurship and Development
Workshop sponsored by the World Bank
in Washington, D.C.
David
Buffaloe (current PhD student) will
present his publication, "Defining
Asymmetric Warfare," at the Countering
Improvise Explosive Devices (IEDs)
conference in Amsterdam, May
15–16. Buffaloe will provide
an overview of the current operational
environment in Iraq and Afghanistan.
During the May 21–25 Tri-Service
Radar Symposium in Orlando, Fla.,
Buffaloe will give an overview of
the operational environment in Iraq
and Afghanistan and discuss operations
to counter improvised explosive devices.
Professor
Kenneth Button gave a presentation, “Stability
of Airline Markets,” at the
10th Hamburg Airport Conference in
Hamburg, Germany, in February. Also
in February, Button addressed “Distance
and Competitiveness—Emerging
Continental Network Barriers and
Strategic Partners” to the
Gateway and Corridor workshop in
Winnipeg, Canada. In March, Button
was the program organizer for the
48th Transportation Research Forum
in Boston. He spoke on the topic, “‘Temporal-Fares-Offered
Curve’ in Air Transportation.” In
April, Button presented “The
Effects of Air Transportation on
the Movement of Labor” at the
Association of American Geographers
Annual Meeting in San Francisco.
Also in April, Button presented an
overview of current transportation
problems in developing countries
and the possible involvement for
the World Bank in finding solutions
when he spoke at a Washington, D.C.,
meeting where the World Bank launched
a major report, “A Decade of
Action in Transport.”
Button's
participation at the World Bank meeting
can be viewed on B-SPAN.
David
Diamond, Juan Julio Gutierrez, Adriana
Kocornik-Mina, and Chunpu Song (all
current PhD students) are
expected to present at the 6th Annual
Meeting of the Technology, Management,
and Policy Graduate Consortium hosted
by the Department of Engineering
and Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon
University in Pittsburgh, June 24–26. Diamond’s presentation
is “Evaluating Public Policies
for Hybrid Electric Vehicles: Evidence
from State and Local Data,” Gutierrez’s is “Effect
of Foreign Technology Diffusion on
the Demand of Skilled Labor in Low
and Medium Technology (LMT) Sectors,” Kocornik-Mina’s is “The
Effects of Space and Time on Interstate
Disparities in India,” and Song’s is “Public
Infrastructure and Regional Productivity
in China.” Professor
David Hart plans to accompany
the PhD students to the meeting. |