Jeffrey
R. Vincent is the Clarence F. Korstian Professor
of Forest Economics and Management in the Nicholas School
of the Environment and Earth Sciences at Duke University.
Vincent’s research focuses on the economics of natural
resource management and policy in developing countries. Currently,
his two main projects are a 5-year project with the Forest
Research Institute Malaysia on biodiversity conservation in
tropical landscapes affected by commercial logging, and an
ongoing project on the joint impacts of brown clouds and greenhouse
gases on climate change, water, and agriculture in South Asia.
He has also worked extensively on the adjustment of national
income and wealth accounts for resource depletion.
Vincent’s books include the Handbook of Environmental
Economics (North-Holland, three volumes, 2003, 2005) and Managing
Natural Wealth: Environment and Development in Malaysia (RFF
Press, 2005). His articles have appeared in environmental
economics journals, including the Journal of Environmental
Economics and Management, Land Economics, and Environmental
and Resource Economics; economic development journals, including
the World Bank Economic Review, Economic Development and Cultural
Change, and World Development; forestry journals, including
Forest Science and the Journal of Forestry; and general science
journals, such as Science. He received the Cozzarelli Prize
for the best article in applied biological, agricultural,
and environmental sciences published in the Proceedings of
the U.S. National Academy of Sciences in 2006 and the McKinsey
Award for the most significant article published in the Harvard
Business Review in 2003.
Vincent serves on the board of the Beijer Institute of Ecological
Economics in Stockholm, Sweden, and the international advisory
committees of the South Asian Network of Development and Environmental
Economists (SANDEE) and the Center for Environmental Economics
and Policy in Africa (CEEPA). He is on the editorial boards
of Environment and Development Economics and the Journal of
Tropical Forest Science. He consults regularly for the World
Bank and other international organizations. He has directed
or worked on projects in Bulgaria, China, Costa Rica, India,
Indonesia, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Pakistan, Romania,
Russia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Thailand. Prior to joining
Duke in July 2007, he held positions in the Graduate School
of International Relations & Pacific Studies at the University
of California, San Diego (2001-7); the Institute for International
Development at Harvard University (1990-2001); and the Department
of Forestry at Michigan State University (1987-90). He has
degrees from Yale University (Ph.D., 1988), Michigan State
University (M.S., 1984), and Harvard University (A.B., 1981).
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