Charles Clark

Dr. Charles M. A. Clark
Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs
Senior Fellow, Vincentian Center for Church and Society
Professor of Economics

Dr. Clark is currently: Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs, Tobin College of Business; Senior Fellow, Vincentian Center for Church and Society; and Professor of Economics.

He earned a B.A. from Fordham University and both an M.A. and Ph.D. from the New School for Social Research, writing his dissertation under the supervision of Robert Heilbronner.

His teaching schedule for Fall of 2005 is as follows:

   ECO 1326    TH  9:10-10:35 AM

He is the author of Economic Theory and Natural Philosophy (1992), Pathways to a Basic Income (with John Healy) (1997); Basic Income: Economic Security for All Canadians (with Sally Lerner and Robert Needlham) (1999) and The Basic Income Guarantee: Ensuring Progress and Prosperity in the 21st Century (2002) and the editor of History and Historians of Political Economy (1994); Institutional Economics and the Theory of Social Value (1995); Unemployment in Ireland (with Catherine Kavanagh) (1998) and Rediscovering Abundance, (with Helen Alford, Steve Cortright and Mike Naughton) (2005). He has lectured widely in the United States and Europe. He has more than 100 publications and has made more than 80 professional presentations. Dr. Clark is currently President of Association for Evolutionary Economics and is Past President of the Association for Institutionalist Thought.  Past positions include: Associate Editor of the Review of Business, book review editor of History of Economic Ideas; the Board of Directors of the Association for Evolutionary Economics.  His current research interests include: basic income policies; poverty and income inequality; the Irish economy; alternative measures of economic and social well-being; Catholic social thought and the role of values and ethics in the economy.

Dr. Clark has been Visiting Professor of Economics at University College Cork, Ireland and the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum), Rome.   Dr. Clark has also served as a consultant on fiscal impact analysis; the economic impact of baseball stadiums; on tax and social welfare reforms and labor economics. The son of two librarians, Dr. Clark lives on Long Island (where he was born) with his wife and three children. 

           

PUBLICATIONS (listed by Subject Area): </