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Contributors to the Technical Manual
The Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators were developed
with a group of scholars and practitioners who have spent most of
their careers examining their respective domains of study. Their
expertise was invaluable in developing and updating the Indicators
and we gratefully thank them for their efforts.
Constance Battle, M.D.
Calvert-Henderson Health Expert
Constance Battle is a medical doctor who served as the first Fellow
of the Healthier Communities Program of the Healthcare Forum. She
is currently Executive Director of the Foundation for the National
Institutes of Health, which develops private and public sector partnerships
to support the goals of the National Institutes for Health and meet
the challenges of the many diseases that affect society.
Before joining the Foundation, Dr. Battle was Executive Director
of the National Museum of Women in the Arts for nearly two years.
Dr. Battle served as the Chief Executive Officer and Medical Director
of the Hospital for Sick Children in Washington, D.C. from 1973
to 1995. Dr. Battle is currently a professor in the Department of
Pediatrics at the George Washington University School of Medicine
where she is president of the Medical School Alumni Association.
She is also a member of the academic staff at Children's National
Medical Center.
Dr. Battle received a B.S. in chemistry from Trinity College and
an M.D. from the George Washington University School of Medicine.
Riane Eisler
Calvert-Henderson Human Rights Expert
Riane Eisler is the author of The Chalice and the Blade: Our History, Our Future,
which was hailed by Princeton antrhopologist Ashley Montagu as
"the most important book since Darwin's Origin of Species" and
translated into 16 languages. Her other books, Sacred Pleasure: Sex, Myth,
and Politics of the Body, The Partnership Way, Women, Men, and Global Quality of Life
(based on a study of statistical data from 89 nations), Dissolution and Equal Rights
Handbook, have also received wide use and critical praise. Her forthcoming
book, Tomorrow's Children, applies the partnership model to education,
providing guidelines for Partnership Education from kindergarten
to 12th grade and beyond.
Patrice
Flynn, Ph.D.
Calvert-Henderson Employment Expert
Patrice Flynn is an economist (Ph.D., M.A.) of the Chicago tradition,
clinical social worker (M.S.W.), researcher, teacher, and writer
concerned about improving economic and social conditions in the
U.S. and abroad. Her specialty is empirical measurement with a particular
focus on developing models and indicators to assess quality of life.
Patrice is skilled at integrating economic concepts and statistics
into other fields such as the nonprofit sector, sustainable development,
national security, labor rights, politics, and continuing education.
She has produced a strong publication record from this research.
Patrice is the founder and CEO of FLYNN RESEARCH, a basic
and applied research institute located in the Blue Ridge Mountains,
60-miles outside of Washington, D.C. The firm designs empirical
tools to measure the: (a) roles, functions, and contributions of
for-profit and nonprofit organizations and (b) overall quality of
life in the United States.
Formerly, Patrice was the Vice President of Research at Independent
Sector in D.C., a labor economist at The Urban Institute, and the
International Food and Nutrition Supervisor for Catholic Relief
Services in Rwanda and the Islamic Republic of Mauritania. Dr. Flynn
is also an adjunct economics professor at George Washington University
where she teaches career Navy and Air Force officers.
Mary Jenifer
Calvert-Henderson Health Expert
Mary Jenifer holds a Master's in Health Care Administration from the
Geroge Washington University. She completed her administrative residency
with Dr. Constance Battle at the Hospital for Sick Children. She currently
works for Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.
Trudy
A. Karlson, Ph.D.
Calvert-Henderson Public Safety Expert
Trudy A. Karlson is a senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
at the Center for Health Systems Research and Analysis.
Dr. Karlson has a Ph.D. in injury epidemiology from the University
of Wisconsin-Madison and has done research on motor vehicle crashes,
gun violence, emergency medical services, and other areas related
to injury prevention and control. She is the author, with Stephen
Hargarten, M.D. of a book on gun violence, Reducing Firearm Injuries
and Death: A Public Health Sourcebook on Guns published by Rutgers
University Press in 1997.
Her recent activities as a senior scientist include developing
an emergency department data collection system and an outpatient
data system for the State of Wisconsin, linking motor vehicle crash
and health data for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
and consulting on health care quality measures for employers' coalitions.
From 1998 to 2000, she was the Deputy Director of the Wisconsin
Network for Health Policy Research with Dr. David Kindig, the Director.
The Network, housed in the Department of Preventive Medicine, has
as its mission to translate health policy research into practice
and bring health policy issues to the attention of the research
community. From 1994 to 1996, Dr. Karlson was the Director of the
Office of Health Care Information, an agency which housed the state's
hospital discharge data system.
In addition to injury control, she has taught program evaluation
and research methods to engineering students, medical residents,
and public health workers. Dr. Karlson has additional expertise
in state health data systems, health care evaluation, quality measurement,
and probablistic data linkage methods.
Alya Kayal, Esq.
Calvert-Henderson Human Rights Expert
Alya Kayal joined Calvert Group's Social Research Department in
1994 as an International/Human Rights Analyst. Ms. Kayal was previously
employed as a research assistant by the U.S. Department of Labor's
International Labor Affairs Bureau to work on an International Child
Labor Report. Ms. Kayal worked on a special project of the U.S.
Information Agency and the Soros Foundation on the status of independent
media in Eastern Europe and the states of the former Soviet Union.
In 1992, Ms. Kayal worked as an aide to the U.S. expert member of
the United Nations Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination
and Protection of Minorities. While there, she drafted several human
rights resolutions and assisted in the negotiations on complex political
and human rights issues with representatives from various countries.
Ms. Kayal is an active member of the American Bar Association's
international law division. She is a co-author of The Forty-Fourth
Session of the United Nations Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination
and Protection of Minorities and The Special Session of the Commission
on Human Rights on the Situation in the Former Yugoslavia (1993).
She is also a contributor to the annual International Legal Developments
Review of the International Lawyer, American Bar Association. Ms.
Kayal holds a law degree from the University of Minnesota and a
B.A. in Sociology and International Communications from Rutgers,
the State University of New Jersey.
John
A. "Skip" Laitner
Calvert-Henderson Energy Expert
Skip Laitner is a resource economist with more than 30 years of
experience in public policy analysis, economic impact studies, and
economic development planning. He currently serves as the Senior
Economist for Technology Policy within the EPA's Office of Atmospheric
Programs. In that capacity, Mr. Laitner was awarded the EPA's 1998
Gold Medal for his work with a team of economists that helped lay
the foundation for the recent Kyoto Protocol on Greenhouse Gas Emissions.
With more than 150 articles, reports, and studies to his credit,
Mr. Laitner is best known for his many studies on the employment,
economic development, and productivity benefits of a more energy-efficient
future. He is a frequent lecturer and has appeared as an expert
witness in more than four dozen legal hearings and adjudicatory
proceedings throughout the country. He has testified on a variety
of issues before a variety of legislative bodies. Mr. Laitner has
conducted technical seminars in such diverse places as Australia,
Canada, China, Germany, Korea, and South Africa. He has a master's
degree in resource economics.
Although Mr. Laitner relies on the most credible sources of information
to drive his various assessments of the nation's energy consumption
patterns, the Calvert-Henderson Energy Indicator should not be taken
as representing the views of either the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency or the U.S. Government.
Carrie Y. Lee
Calvert-Henderson Health Expert
Carrie Lee is a graduate student in sociology at Vanderbilt University
She holds a B.A. degree from the University of California at Santa Cruz.
Her interests are in stratification, gender studies, culture, and policy.
William
J. Mallett, Ph.D.
Calvert-Henderson Infrastructure Expert
Will Mallett is a Senior Research Analyst with MacroSys Research
and Technology where he specializes in transportation, urban development,
and public policy and planning. He is a major contributor to reports
published by the U.S. Department of Transportation's Bureau of Transportation
Statistics and the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment.
He has also published research in a variety of academic journals.
Dr. Mallett teaches urban geography as an adjunct faculty member
in the Department of Geography at George Washington University.
Dr. Mallett holds a Ph.D. in City and Regional Planning from Cornell
University and geography degrees from the University of Bristol
in the United Kingdom and West Virginia University. He lives with
his wife, Cathy, an urban planner, in Arlington, Virginia.
Lawrence Mishel, Ph.D.
Calvert-Henderson Income Expert
Lawrence Mishel is the Vice President of the Economic Policy Institute,
www.epinet.org, and specializes in the field of productivity, competitiveness,
income distribution, labor markets, education, and industrial relations.
He is the co-author of The State of Working America, a comprehensive
review of incomes, wages, employment, and other dimensions of living
standards published biennially.
He holds a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Wisconsin,
an M.A. in economics from the American University, a B.S. (Magna
Cum Laude) from Pennsylvania State University and has been published
in a variety of academic and non-academic journals.
Richard A. Peterson, Ph.D.
Calvert-Henderson Re-creation Expert
Richard Peterson is a Professor of Sociology at Vanderbilt University.
He has also served at the University of Wisconsin, the University
of Leeds, and the National Endowment for the Arts. A participant
in six professional societies, he was the founding Chair of the
Culture Section of the American Sociological Association.
Dr. Peterson has authored or edited eight books, the most recent
of which are Age and Arts Participation for the National Endowment
for the Arts and Creating Country Music: Fabricating Authenticity
for the University of Chicago Press. Both were widely reviewed by
the national press and the latter has received several awards. Dr.
Peterson's numerous articles have focused on the production and
consumption of culture, patterns of leisure, and the working of
the media industry.
With colleagues, Dr. Peterson is currently researching the impact
of Internet transmission of music on the music industry and on the
nature of popular music itself; the changing patterns of recreation
among Internet users; long-standing fascination of whites with African-American
music; and the Internet-driven coalescence of alternative country
music.
Kenneth P. Scott
Calvert-Henderson Environment Expert
Kenneth P. Scott is a is a Portfolio Manager and Research Analyst
at Walden Asset Management, the socially responsive investment division
of United States Trust Company of Boston (USTC). Mr. Scott is also
co-portfolio manager of the Walden SmallCap Innovations. He evaluates
the social and environmental performance of client portfolio holdings
and participates in shareholder activism initiatives. Mr. Scott
also serves as a securities analyst at USTC.
From 1993 through 1998, Ken worked as a senior environmental analyst
at Calvert Group, where he evaluated the social performance of mutual
fund investments and initiated shareholder dialogue activities.
He served previously for three years at the Council on Economic
Priorities where he co-authored company-specific environmental reports.
Mr. Scott earned a B.A. (with Honors) at Boston College.
Patrick A. Simmons
Calvert-Henderson Shelter Expert
Patrick Simmons is Director of Housing Demography at the Fannie
Mae Foundation. Prior to joining the Fannie Mae Foundation, he held
several positions in the Office of Housing Research at the Fannie
Mae corporation, including Manager of Housing Policy Research.
Mr. Simmons is currently managing a multiyear research program
on the efforts of the housing finance industry to expand homeownership
opportunities for historically undeserved populations. He is also
editor of a statistical compendium titled Housing Statistics of
the United States, and is Associate Editor of the Foundation's two
research journals, Housing Policy Debate and Journal of Housing
Research. While at the Fannie Mae corporation, Mr. Simmons managed
research projects in the areas of housing and mortgage market discrimination,
homelessness, and urban housing policy.
Colonel
Daniel M. Smith, Ret.
Calvert-Henderson National Security Expert
Colonel Daniel M. Smith graduated from the United States Military
Academy at West Point in 1966. Commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant of
Infantry, Colonel Smith's initial assignment was as an infantry
and heavy weapons platoon leader with the 3rd Armor Division in
Germany. Following language training, he then served as an intelligence
advisor in Vietnam before returning to the U.S. to do graduate work
at Cornell University and teach philosophy and English at West Point.
Subsequent intelligence and public affairs assignments took him
to Fort Hood, Texas; the Army Materiel Research and Development
Command, where he was the speech writer for the Commanding General;
the Defense Intelligence Agency; and Headquarters, Department of
the Army. Six of his years with the Defense Intelligence Agency
were spent in London working in the British Ministry of Defense
and then as Military Attache in the U.S. Embassy. Colonel Smith
retired from the Army in 1992 after 26 years service. From April
1993 to September 2002 he was an analyst at the non-partisan Center
for Defense Information in Washington, DC, becoming Associate Director
in 1995 and Chief of Research in 1999.
Colonel Smith is a graduate of the Army Command and General Staff
College, the Armed Forces Staff College, and the Army War College.
He was awarded the Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit,
Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Army
Commendation Medal, Joint Service Achievement Medal, and the Vietnam
Service Medal(4).
Colonel Smith joined the Friends Committee on National Legislation
in September 2002 as Senior Fellow on Military Affairs.
Jill Dianne Swenson, Ph.D.
Calvert-Henderson Education Expert
Jill Swenson is a tenured associate professor in the Roy H. Park
School of Communications with more than 15 years of teaching experience
and research related to media ethics, public deliberation, community
development, and the role of news in a mass-mediated democracy.
She has taught at Ithaca College since 1992. Previously she has
held faculty positions at the University of Georgia-Athens, University
of Wisconsin-Green Bay, Roosevelt University, and the University
of Chicago. She has contributed chapters to nine books, authored
six refereed academic journal articles, co-authored an additional
six academic articles, and presented 47 conference papers. Her work
as a scholar reflects a commitment to creating an informed citizenry,
fostering public deliberation, investigating socioeconomic and environmental
issues from interdisciplinary approaches, cultivating critical thinking
skills, and developing new rigorous research and reporting methods.
Dr. Swenson earned her Ph.D. in 1989 from the Committee on Human
Development and her Master of Arts in the Social Sciences in 1981
at the University of Chicago. She graduated from Lawrence University,
Appleton, Wisconsin, with a Bachelor of Arts in 1980. She has received
previous recognition and support for teaching, research, and service
from Lilly, the Poynter Institute, Annenberg Washington Program,
International Radio-Television Society Industry/Faculty Seminars,
the Freedom Forum Leadership Institute, Kettering Foundation Public
Policy Workshops and National Issues Forums, Cox Center, Kellogg,
and the Roy H. Park Foundation.
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