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a jamaican excelling in the US :eek:

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  • a jamaican excelling in the US :eek:

    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']The bigger picture[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']By Sarah Murray[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Published: February 21 2010 22:35 | Last updated: February 21 2010 22:35[/FONT]


    [FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Peter Blair Henry: ‘Business is one of the most powerful institutions on earth’[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']One thing Peter Blair Henry, [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Stern School of Business[/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']’s new dean, admits he’ll have trouble in adapting to in his move from California to Manhattan, is the weather.[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']But then, as the Jamaican-born academic puts it: “Everywhere outside of the 18th parallel is cold to me.” Yet if Prof Henry’s roots as an “immigrant kid from Jamaica” cause him to feel the cold, they have also shaped his outlook – one that is resolutely international.[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']“Because I come from a place like Jamaica, which is a small, open economy, I viscerally get the importance of the global economy,” says Prof Henry, who took up his post at New York University’s Stern in January.[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']“My research in the past dozen years has been about policies for emerging economies – and emerging economies are now in fact becoming more and more the world economy.”[/FONT]

    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Academic profile[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Born in Jamaica, Peter Blair Henry became a US citizen in 1986. He was a Rhodes Scholar at [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Oxford[/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif'], gaining a BA in mathematics in 1993. He holds a BA in economics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']He received a PhD in economics from[/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Massachusetts Institute of Technology[/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']. During his time in graduate school he worked as an advisor to the governors of two central banks – the Bank of Jamaica and the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, where his research contributed to the establishment of the first stock market in the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union.[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Before joining Stern, Prof Henry spent 12 years teaching in various positions at Stanford Graduate School of Business, his most recent position being professor of international economics.[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']He is a member of the Council on Foreign relations, a non-resident senior fellow of the Brookings Institution, a senior fellow of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research and a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research.[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']In 2004, he participated in the Copenhagen Consensus, a meeting of leading international economists. He also worked with the Obama administration’s transition team on a review of the International Monetary Fund, World Bank and other international lending agencies.[/FONT]
    [FONT='Arial','sans-serif']A glance through the list of his recent publications gives some idea of this focus, with articles ranging from global financial instability and financial liberalisation in emerging markets to whether debt relief or aid better serves poor countries.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Prof Henry’s most recent position at [/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif'][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Stanford Graduate School of Business[/FONT][/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif'] – as professor of international economics and associate director of the Centre for Global Business and the Economy – reflects the international focus of his work and interests.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Moreover, he has had occasion to deploy his knowledge and experience in several governmental advisory roles. He has been an economic advisor to Caribbean and African central bank governors and more recently, served on the Obama transition team, reviewing international lending institutions such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. [/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']His arrival at Stern comes in the wake of the work done by his predecessor, Thomas Cooley, in building up Stern’s capabilities as a research-oriented institution. It also coincides with a broadening of the school’s traditional prowess in finance to encompass developments in the broader economy.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']“He’ll bring a new focus that’s more global to the school,” says Prof Cooley, a professor of macroeconomics and international economy. “He brings something that’s a little different.”[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']This includes sporting prowess. While a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford in the 1990s, Prof Henry was awarded a Full Blue in basketball and at the [/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif'][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']University of North Carolina Chapel Hill[/FONT][/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif'], he was a finalist in the 1991 basketball slam-dunk competition.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']But if the new dean can please crowds with his athletic basketball shots, he seems equally likely to prove a winner with MBA students, who these days are clamouring for more course content on the role of business in reducing world poverty and the ways in which globalisation can benefit poor countries – research subjects on which Prof Henry has long been engaged.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']“Business is one of the most powerful institutions on earth for creating wealth and opportunity and helping to lift people out of poverty,” he says. “When you think about it that way, then business is not separate from development policy.”[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']It is an approach whose relevance has been heightened by the global financial crisis, which exposed the increasing interdependence of the world’s economies. “We’re at an incredibly interesting time in global business,” says Prof Henry. “Capitalism has come under question and countries are questioning the best way to move forward.”[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Management education institutions, he argues, can play a critical role in answering such questions by fostering discussions between corporations, development institutions and policymakers. “Business schools need to be at the forefront of this,” he says.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']He also believes schools should reflect the increasingly blurred lines between those who work in the corporate world and those who are in government or part of the global development community. “We should think about recruiting more students who are going to go off and become policymakers,” he says.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Like his predecessor, the new dean also believes schools should act as commentators. Stern has already established a strong position in this respect, partly through the prominent commentary of Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics at the school.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Prof Henry wants to take this approach further. “To some extent business schools have been too narrow a part of the conversation,” he says. “What I’d like to see is for Stern to play a bigger role and to become an international hub and convening place for conversations between business, government and society.”[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']His first faculty appointment underlines this approach. Nobel laureate Michael Spence, currently professor of management at Stanford and chairman of the Commission on Growth and Development, which focuses on growth and poverty reduction in developing countries, will join Stern’s faculty in September.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Both Prof Henry’s parents were scientists and the dean says he has inherited an ability to approach facts with a dispassionate eye – a quality he believes makes him an appropriate champion for this mission.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']Moreover, as the third of four children, he believes he is a natural peacemaker. “I’m generally slow to anger, quick to forgive and I take in information before making decisions. So no matter how controversial the decision, my general demeanour is to put on white lab coat and gloves and look at the evidence, weigh the arguments and see what makes sense.”[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']But he accepts that his move from the “quiet life of a scholar” to dean of a leading business school will present challenges, particularly for a researcher, where every last detail of a paper, article or book chapter is the author’s responsibility.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']“As dean the buck stops with me, but you have to relinquish lots of control because you have to rely on lots of people,” he says. “So for me it will be a challenge to take a more macro approach to things and get less involved in the details.”[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']At the same time, his move to New York means he and his wife and four children will be making a lifestyle shift.[/FONT][FONT='Times New Roman','serif']
    [/FONT][FONT='Arial','sans-serif']“As an economist I’m aware that life is full of trade offs. And we’ll be trading off a beautiful backyard and sunshine for the excitement of intellectual activity that is Manhattan ... we’re really excited about that.”[/FONT]

    Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

  • #2
    Good Post, But....

    Your sarcasm is noted, although probably unnecessary!

    No one here says that Jamaicans do not excel abroad! In fact, I can type a list right now, without even having to think deeply, of people with Jamaican roots who have excelled abroad, and athletes would not even have to be on this list!

    Rather, posters have generally focused on things that are impacting Jamaica in one way or another! A Jamaican excelling abroad has virtually no impact on Jamaica’s image in any way, as often it is not even realized (except by very patriotic and diligent persons such as you) that such persons are Jamaicans! Colin Powell is one major exception to this seemingly universal rule of not really knowing the origins of such people. To give merely one of dozens of possible examples in ending my comment, before you posted the fact that the very outstanding 1970s record producer Thom Bell was born in Jamaica, I’m sure that there was not a single person here who knew that.

    So, a good post, Gamma (needs cleaning up to make it more readable), but the sarcasm (“Eek”) is not necessary, boss.

    Comment


    • #3
      boss some people get angry some get sacastic ..... some quick to criticise and slow to give respect where it is due. it takes every kind of people, the make the world go 'round...nuh suh robert palmer seh?

      sorry about the text it did not show up like that before i posted it. it needs a whole heapa cleaning up.

      Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

      Comment


      • #4
        "....Jamaican Excelling...."

        Norman was up the road at Auburn U. during the years I was at Tuskegee U.

        I post this to support your point Historian.

        There are thousands of successful and extremely successful Jamaicans abroad . We walk by them every day and least suspect their origin.

        The Jamaicans we (generally) see are those we hear . They are loud, vulgar, aggressive and boisterous....

        Jawge--below is the type of achievement that you speak about from time to time.


        Assistant Professor

        Aerospace Engineering, Mechanics, & Engineering Science College of Engineering

        University of Florida
        P.O. Box 116250
        206 Aerospace Building
        Gainesville, FL 32611

        Phone: (904) 392-1029
        FAX: (904) 392-7303
        Email: NFC@SNOW.AERO.UFL.EDU
        URL:




        Norman Fitz-Coy
        Description of ResearchDr. Fitz-Coy's current research activities are in the areas of (i) satellites retrieval methodologies, (ii) multi-objective control systems, and (iii) multi-axis vibration simulators.

        In satellites retrieval methodologies research, he is investigating methodologies which are applicable to tumbling spacecraft. Currently, he is investigating the stability of interacting bodies in zero-g environments.

        In the research area of multi-objective control systems, he is applying the concepts of differential game theory to the development of control algorithms for systems experiencing conflicts of interest.
        In multi-axis Vibration Simulators research, he is investigating optimal actuator placement for multi-axis simulators, and designing a coordinated control system for 6-axis vibration simulation.

        Recent Papers or PublicationsFitz-Coy, N. G., and A.Chatterjee, "Actuator Placement in Multi-Degree-of Freedom Vibration Simulators," accepted for publication in Shock and Vibration. Fitz-Coy, N. G., and J-W Jang, "Active Vibration Isolation of a Space Platform: A Game Theoretic Approach," in review by the: Journal of Astronautical Science.
        The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

        HL

        Comment


        • #5
          HL - is Norman related to Dr. Steve Fitz-Coy. Steve (is a schoolmate), also went to Auburn.

          I know Steve had other siblings, but caan memba dem name.
          Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
          - Langston Hughes

          Comment


          • #6
            Yes indeed!!!

            Steve Fitz-Coy graduated from Tuskegee U. with a BS and Auburn with a MS and DVM degree.

            Steve works for Schering-Plough in Maryland.

            I will be breaking-bread with them next week-end.
            Last edited by HL; April 29, 2010, 03:37 PM.
            The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

            HL

            Comment


            • #7
              all due respect historian, count me in as one person who knew thom bell was born in jamaica... i wouldn't even go as far as you did to suggest that not a single person knew that... lol... i am sure others on this site knew that fact, as i did...
              'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Baddaz View Post
                all due respect historian, count me in as one person who knew thom bell was born in jamaica... i wouldn't even go as far as you did to suggest that not a single person knew that... lol... i am sure others on this site knew that fact, as i did...

                Baddaz - Thom Bell has been discussed on the site many times in the past. Could have been you or Gamma who told us about him.
                Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                - Langston Hughes

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by HL View Post
                  Yes indeed!!!

                  Steve Fitz-Coy graduated from Tuskegee U. with a BS and Auburn with a MS and DVM degree.

                  Steve works for Schering-Plough in Maryland.

                  I will be breaking-bread with them next week-end.
                  =========================================

                  Him same one at SGP - now Merck. HL - do you know Lloyd Walker (now Prof. @ Univ. of Alabama) also?
                  Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                  - Langston Hughes

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I posted this a while back. See the link below:-

                    Peter Blair Henry
                    "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Tilla View Post
                      I posted this a while back. See the link below:-

                      Peter Blair Henry

                      I remember your posting.
                      Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                      - Langston Hughes

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Thanks HL and GOD BLESS AMERICA! Yes man who waan bex, bex.
                        In the US many Jakans can come be citizens,join the political sytem and make policies. Can you do that in China? Ungrateful set a...... anyway it look like laziness is being encouraged. No one wants to work and do for self as Joshua taught us (more on that in another thread).

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          i didn't, sorry!

                          Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Hmmmmm...don't think i have.
                            The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

                            HL

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