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Enron Mail |
Hi Evening MBA students,
For those of you who will be registering next week for Fall 2001, we have a few updates. 1) We just added E278 Deals on WEDNESDAYS, 6:00-9:30 p.m. This 3-unit course is expected to be very popular as it is triple-listed with the Evening MBA Program, Day MBA Program and Boalt Hall School of Law. Howard Shelanski from the School of Law is the instructor. CCN: #09562 This course will examine why firms engage in certain kinds of transactions and the reasons why governance mechanisms (e.g. integration, joint venture formation, long-term contracting, spot-market exchange) vary across transactions. Why do firms accomplish some transactions through vertical mergers but accomplish others through contracts? What are the attributes of transactions and governance structures that give rise to matches between them? What considerations give rise to whether a deal should be done and then, if so, how it should be structured? In answering questions like those above, this course will examine the roles that transaction costs, economic strategy, and contract law play in influencing the nature and structure of business transactions ranging from mergers and acquisitions to supply contracts, patent licensing, and R&D joint ventures. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH: Professor Shelanski is a full time member of the law faculty at UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law. He received both his law degree and his Ph.D. in economics from UC Berkeley. After graduating from law school he served as a law clerk at federal district and circuit courts and for Justice Antonin Scalia at the U.S. Supreme Court. Before joining the Boalt faculty, he was an associate with the Washington, D.C. firm of Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd & Evans. Professor Shelanski's research focuses on industrial organization, telecommunications regulation, and antitrust. During the 1999-2000 academic year, Professor Shelanski was on leave to serve as Chief Economist of the Federal Communications Commission. During the 1998-1999 academic year he served as a Senior Economist to the President's Council of Economic Advisers. 2) E259-1 Leadership & Change CANCELLED Due to unforeseen circumstances, Leadership & Change has been cancelled for Fall 2001. The course may be offered again in Spring 2002 -- we'll let you know. 3) BA215 Economics of the Nonprofit and Public Sector OPEN TO EVENING MBA STUDENTS Day Course (TuTh 11:00-12:30 p.m.) Instructor: Frances Van Loo This course explains, from an economic point of view, why all countries in the world have not just for-profit businesses, but also governmental and nonprofit organizations. It examines the tasks performed by governments and how nonprofits supplement, and sometimes replace, government in accomplishing these objectives. Because government and nonprofit organizations differ from business in not having a profit motive, ways of making them efficient are discussed. Examples include vouchers, contracting out, and cost-benefit analysis. Also explored are recent developments where alliances are formed between government and business (e.g. sports stadiums), between the nonprofits and business (e.g.environmental preservation), and nonprofits and government (e.g. arts and social services). Finally funding of governments and nonprofit organization is addressed. Examples are drawn from a variety of fields including the arts, community economic development, education, environment, health, international development, religion, social services, and governmental programs in addition to those listed above. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH: M. Frances Van Loo is an Associate Professor of Business and Public Policy in the Haas School of Business. She established the Program in Nonprofit and Public Management at the Haas School, 1989. Currently, she is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Nonprofit Management and Leadership. Honored with a campus-wide Distinguished Teaching Award in 1985, she has also twice received the Earl F. Cheit Distinguished Teaching Award in the School. Known nationally for her work on nonprofit management education, she also does work in the field of philanthropy, including teaching a course for undergraduates on the philanthropic traditions of African-, Asian-, European-, Hispanic-, and Native- Americans in the United States. She is a member of the American Economic Association (AEA), the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management (APPAM), and the Association for Nonprofit and Voluntary Organizations (ARNOVA), and the International Society for Third-Sector Research (ISTR). 4) BA235 Portfolio Management (Th 2:00-4:00 p.m.) CANCELLED Due to unforeseen circumstances, this day class has been cancelled for Fall 2001.
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