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Philip Auerswald
Assistant Professor
Director, Center for Science and
Technology Policy
pauerswa@gmu.edu
703.993.3787
703.993.2284 fax
George Mason School of Public Policy
4400 University Drive MS 3C6
Fairfax, VA 22030
Education
Ph.D. University of Washington
B.A. Yale University
Biography
Philip Auerswald
is Director of the Center for
Science and Technology
Policy and an Assistant Professor
at the School of Public Policy.
Professor Auerswald's work
focuses on linked
processes of technological
and organizational change in the
contexts of policy,
economics,
and strategy. He is the co-editor
of Innovations:
Technology | Governance | Globalization,
a quarterly journal from MIT
Press about people using technology
to
address global challenges.
He author and co-author of
numerous
books, reports, and research
papers, including Taking
Technical Risk: How Innovators,
Executives, and Investors Manage
High-Tech Risks (MIT Press:
2001) and Seeds of Disaster,
Roots of Response: How Private
Action Can Reduce Public Vulnerability (Cambridge
University Press, 2006) Prior
to joining the faculty at George
Mason University, Professor
Auerswald was a lecturer and
Assistant Director of the Science,
Technology, and Public Policy
Program at the Kennedy School
of Government, Harvard University.
He has been a consultant to
the National Academies of Science,
the Commonwealth
of Massacusetts, and the National
Institute of Standards and
Technology.
He holds
a Ph.D. in economics from the
University of Washington and
a B.A. (political
science) from Yale University.
Areas
of Expertise
Innovation
Entrepreneurship
Energy and National Security
Philip
Auerswald, Lewis Branscomb, Sean Gorman, Rajendra Kulkarni, and Laurie Schintler,
"Placing Innovation: A Geographical Information System (GIS) Approach to Identifying
Emergent Technological Activity," GCR 06-902, May 2007.
Forbes.com 3/10/08
2008
Small Business Outlook: Top 10 Up-And-Coming Tech Cities
San Francisco Chronicle
Old oil fears don't match 2007 reality
The American Interest
The Irrelevance of the Middle East
Herald
Tribune
Let's call an end to oil alarmism
Financial
Times
A
model to eradicate false gulf between
doing good and doing well
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