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Michael W. Butler, Ph.D.is Dean of College of Business and Professional Studies
at Angelo State University, San Angelo, Texas 76909. E-mail: michael.butler@angelo.edu.
Phone # 915-942-2337.
Fax # 915-942-2718
Dr. Penelope Caragonne
Dr. James E. Ciecka
Larry Deneen, Ph.D.,
has been the President of Martin-Deneen Associates since 1978. He was appointed
to the National Certification/ Credentialing Boards (CRC, CDMSC) 1975-1986.
Dr. Deneen is a nationally recognized speaker, invited keynote speaker and
seminar leader throughout the country. He has authored five books and dozens
of articles for trade magazines. He has developed disability management services
that include early return-to-work, job modification and/or accommodation,
medical case management, and life care planning. He is a case manager of services.
Dr. Deneen has testified in Superior and Federal Courts addressing questions
of wages, present value of future losses, vocational alternatives, costs
of medical and rehabilitation services and labor market data. He has completed
several marathons, including the New York City Marathon. Background: Ph.D.
in Counseling/Rehabilitation/Personnel, University of Georgia M.S. Rehabilitation,
University of Arizona, Rehabilitation Center Board Certified in Counseling,
Rehabilitation, and Case Management. For more information go to Dr. Deneen's website.
Edward Foster
is professor and chairman, Department of Economics, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, where he has taught since 1961. His research has been in the
costs of inflation, and in cost-benefit analysis. .He has done part-time consulting
in forensic economics since the mid-1960s. Dr. Foster received his Ph. D.
in economic from MIT in 1961. His background in actuarial science includes
2 years’ employment with the actuarial department of a life insurance company,
a year of graduate study in actuarial science (Occidental College, Los Angeles),
and successful completion of the first four of five examinations then required
to become an associate of the Society of Actuaries.
Janet L. Johnson received
her Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where
her training focused on labor economics and econometrics. She has served
on the faculty at Syracuse University and as an adjunct professor at University
of Colorado-Boulder. She currently is an
adjunct professor in the Andrew Young School of Public Policy at Georgia
State University. Over the past 15 years, Dr. Johnson has developed
an independent consulting practice, Johnson & Associates, which focuses
on forensic economics, human resources consulting, and statistical analysis.
She has prepared numerous appraisals of economic loss in cases of personal
injury, wrongful death, employment termination, and business torts, and has
testified in over 100 trials or arbitrations. She has particular interest
and expertise in the statistical analysis of pay and employment practices
multiple plaintiff or class action suits alleging discrimination.
Dr. Walter D. Johnson
Robert A. Male, Ph.D.
has an active practice as a Vocational Economic Consultant working mostly
in Oregon, Washington, and Nevada. He is a Past President of the American
Rehabilitation Economics Association (AREA), was the founder and four year
Editor of AREA's Journal, "The Earnings Analyst", and served on the AREA Board
for eight years. He continues to be very active in professional forensic economics
organizations. Currently, he is President-Elect of the American Academy of
Economic and Financial Experts (AAEFE), an At-Large Vice President on the
Board of the National Association of Forensic Economics (NAFE), and an Advisory
Board member for the American Board of Disability Analysts (ABDA). More recently
Dr. Male became a member of the Council for Ethics and Disclosure in Damages
Analysis (CEDDA) and the Society of Litigation Economists (SOLE). Dr. Male
has authored articles for the rehabilitation and forensic economics literature
and has presented many programs and papers at professional conferences for
AAEFE, ABDA, AREA and NAFE. He has held faculty positions at Marylhurst University,
Oregon State University, Portland State University, and has taught seminars
in Forensic Economics for Marylhurst University and the University of North
Alabama. Dr. Male can be contacted at: bobmale@attbi.com
Gerald D. Martin
earned his Ph.D. in Finance at Arizona State University, has taught at several
universities and is Professor Emeritus at California State University, Fresno.
He began work as a forensic economist in 1973 while still teaching.
In 1992, he retired from teaching to devote full-time to his consulting work.
He has written a variety of articles and presented numerous papers at meetings
of NAFE, AAEFE, and AREA. His book on forensic economics, first published
in 1988 and revised annually, has been used as a text in economic classes
in over a dozen universities. He has been a board member of AREA and
in January, 2002, began a three year term as NAFE vice- president at large.
He currently works with the firm of Bruno, Mack and Barclay in San Diego.
For more information about Dr. Martin, please go to their website.
Dr. Anthony R. Riccardi
James D. Rodgers
is Professor Emeritus of Economics at Penn State University. He received
his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Virginia in 1970. Dr.
Rodgers has taught a variety of graduate and undergraduate courses in economics,
including upper division undergraduate courses in forensic economics and the
economics of accident law. His research in the area of forensic economics
includes published work on age-earnings profiles, the personal maintenance
deduction, the valuation of time spent in non-market activities, and the
valuation of Social Security benefits; he is also the co-author of a recent
book on expert economic testimony. Dr. Rodgers has worked as an economic
consultant since 1976, preparing economic damage appraisal reports and trial
testimony pertaining thereto. He is the current President of the National
Association of Forensic Economics. For more information, go to Dr. Rodgers' web site.
Gary R. Skoog
earned his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Minnesota in 1976 and
a BA from the University of Michigan in economics and actuarial science in
1968. He has taught at the University of Minnesota, the University of Wisconsin,
and the University of Chicago; currently he is teaching at De Paul University
and practicing forensic economics with Legal Econometrics, Inc. located in
Glenview, Illinois, a northern suburb of Chicago. E-mail: gskoog@umich.edu;
Phone: 847-729-6154; FAX 847-729-6158. He has taught graduate courses
in microeconomics, macroeconomics, statistical analysis, business and economic
forecasting, applied time series, and econometric theory and undergraduate
principles. His forensic economics research centers on worklife expectancy
- its general theory, applications and misapplications, especially regarding
disability.
Dr. Frank D. Tinari
John O. Ward, Phd.
is chair of the Department of Economics at the University of Missouri at Kansas
City. He is the founding editor of the Journal of Forensic Economics and
still co-editor of that journal. For more information, go to Dr. Ward's web site.
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