The Log | School News
Nicholas School's Kramer Receives Prestigious Duke Award
for Faculty
Social scientist Randall
A. Kramer of the Nicholas School was presented
the 2004 University Scholar/Teacher of the Year Award, during
Duke’s Founder’s Day convocation on Sept. 30.
Established in 1981 by the United
Methodist Church’s Division of Higher Education, this award
is one of the highest honors bestowed by Duke. It is given
to a faculty member who shows exceptional qualities of research,
teaching, mentorship and citizenship.
Kramer, professor of resource and
environmental economics, routinely has received the highest
scores among teaching evaluations in the Nicholas School,
where he offers a variety of classes in environmental economics
and policy, especially focusing on policies that are developed
and instituted in foreign lands.
The Nicholas School’s “Teacher of
the Year” in 1989 and 1998, he is a committed and valued mentor
to graduate students within the doctoral and professional
masters programs, and provides an extraordinary amount of
service to the university, serving on search committees, the
Academic Council, and the Provost’s Academic Planning Committee.
Kramer’s research has focused on
ecosystem valuation, water resource economics and the economics
of biodiversity and natural resource management in developing
countries. He has published extensively and is co-editor of
Last Stand: Protected Areas and the Defense of Tropical
Biodiversity, Oxford University Press.
Current research efforts include
projects on landowner behavior toward wetland restoration,
deforestation and malaria in the tropics and economic valuation
of policies to reduce mortality risks from pollution.
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