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LECTURES AND CONFERENCES
Click here to see Archive of Lectures and Conferences
All are welcome to BCGIT Lectures and Conferences.
FALL 2004
A Study of Academic Entrepreneurs using Venture Capital Data
Dr. Junfu Zhang
Public Policy Institute of California
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
12-2pm, Harris Room,119 Moses hall
When university employees choose to start businesses, they create a channel for technology transfer from university to industry. This talk presents findings from an empirical study of such academic entrepreneurship. We will address the following questions: What is the academic background of these entrepreneurs? What industries do they enter? Do they start businesses close to their universities? And what kind of universities tend to generate more academic entrepreneurs? We find that most of the academic entrepreneurs come from an engineering or medical science background. Entrepreneurial activities among university employees concentrate in biotech and information technology industries. About two-thirds of the academic entrepreneurs locate their businesses in the same state as the universities. National academy membership, a measure of a universityıs research quality, is the only variable that explains a large proportion of the variations in the number of academic entrepreneurs at the university level. The abundance of venture capital near the university has no significant effect on academic entrepreneurship once we control for university characteristics.
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A Mouse in Town Hall: E-mail and Local Politics
Professor Elsa Chen
Department of Political Science, Santa Clara University
Thursday, November 18, 2004
12-2pm, Harris Room,119 Moses hall
E-mail has the potential to facilitate direct communication between
constituents and local public officials, who (unlike members of
Congress, governors, etc.) usually lack the staff and other resources to
engage in extensive mailing, faxing, in-person visits, and other
communication. However, many local officials do not have the technical
resources or support to use e-mail extensively. Furthermore, even when
sufficient technology and resources are present, prevailing attitudes
and perceptions about e-mail may still prevent local officials from
using electronic methods to engage with, or respond to, constituents.
This "disconnect" constitutes an important problem since younger
adults tend instinctively to reach for the keyboard, rather than the
telephone or mailbox, to communicate.
Using survey data collected from mayors and city council members from
50 cities in the San Francisco Bay Area, I examine how e-mail is used to
communicate with constituents, in comparison with other forms of
communication. I also discuss the main problems and concerns
experienced by local officials with regard to e-mail use.
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SPRING 2004
Diaspora and Homeland Development Conference
Tuesday, April 13, 2004
9am-5pm, 223 Moses hall
The Conference aims at understanding and promoting the capacities of diasporic communities for economic development in their homeland. Contemporary diasporas, because of their skills, wealth, and transnational networks, have become a new engine for cooperation between hostland and homeland. Countries discuessed will include Haiti, the Philippines, Mexico, Palestine, Morocco, Iran, India, Pakistan, and Dominican Republic.

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Archive of Lectures and Conferences
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