Perc'S Enviropreneur Institute 2012 Faculty

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PERC’S ENVIROPRENEUR INSTITUTE 2012 FACULTYTerry L. AndersonPresidentPERC2048 Analysis DriveSuite ABozeman MT 59718406.587.9591tla@perc.orgTerry Anderson is the president of PERC and senior fellow at the HooverInstitution, Stanford University. He believes that market approaches can beboth economically sound and environmentally sensitive. Anderson’s workhelped launch the idea of “free market environmentalism” with thepublication of his book by that title, coauthored with Donald Leal.Government subsidies often degrade the environment, he points out, andprivate property rights encourage resource stewardship by harnessing marketincentives to individual initiative for protecting environmental quality.Anderson is the author or editor of 37 books including most recently TappingWater Markets with Brandon Scarborough and Lawrence R. Watson. Hisbook The Not So Wild, Wild West with P. J. Hill (Stanford University Press2004) which was awarded the 2005 Sir Antony Fisher International MemorialAward and Greener Than Thou: Are You Really an Environmentalist withLaura Huggins (Hoover Institution Press 2008), which was a runner up forthe same award in 2010. Anderson has published widely in both professionaljournals, including the Journal of Law and Economics and Economic Inquiryand the popular press, including the Wall Street Journal, the ChristianScience Monitor, and Fly Fisherman. During his career at Montana StateUniversity, Anderson won several outstanding teaching awards and is nowprofessor emeritus of economics. He received his B.S. from the University ofMontana and his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Washington.Anderson is an avid outdoorsman accomplished at big game hunting, birdshooting, fishing, skiing, and hiking.Paul BaumanSenior Principal GiftsOfficerThe Nature ConservancyWorld Wide Office2424 Spruce StreetBoulder CO 80302720.974.7003paul bauman@tnc.orgPaul Bauman is the part of the Global Priorities Team at the NatureConservancy. He is responsible for generating “principal gifts” defined at 5Million minimum, from high net worth families across the western UnitedStates. Previous to this position, he served as director of Development for theNature Conservancy’s Colorado chapter for three years. Previous to theNature Conservancy, Bauman was the director of development for theCU-Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, where he helpedorganize and complete capital campaigns on the Boulder campus. He was thelead fundraiser in negotiating the 250 Million pledge to CU from Bill andClaudia Coleman in 1999 to create a Center for Cognitive Disabilities.Bauman consults on fundraising within the Nature Conservancy for otherstate chapters and for associated non-profits aligned with the Conservancy’smission of protecting the diversity of life on earth. He earned his PhD inPublic Policy from the University of Colorado.1

ABOUT THE FACULTYDaniel K. BenjaminPERC Senior Fellow andAlumni DistinguishedProfessor Emeritus ofEconomics, ClemsonUniversity1192 Coan Harbour DriveLottsburg VA 22511-2652864.710.8198wahoo@clemson.eduDan Benjamin is Alumni Distinguished Professor Emeritus, ClemsonUniversity; senior fellow and fellowship program director at PERC; andAdjunct Professor Pediatrics, Duke University School of Medicine. Aftergraduating Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Virginia, he obtainedM.A. and Ph.D. degrees from UCLA, where he was a National ScienceFoundation fellow. He has taught at the University of Washington and theUniversity of California at Santa Barbara. Professor Benjamin has been anational fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and servedas staff economist on the Council of Economic Advisors, and as deputyassistant secretary for policy, and later as chief of staff, at the U.S.Department of Labor. He also has been a visiting scholar at the Universityof Liverpool, England; Cardiff University, Wales; and the AmericanEnterprise Institute. During 2004-5 he was the Caird Honorary ResearchFellow at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, England. Over hiscareer, Benjamin has received numerous teaching awards, including beingnamed Alumni Master Teacher, the highest teaching award given byClemson University. Benjamin has published dozens of scholarly articlesand authored or edited more than a dozen books. He has been associateeditor of the scholarly journal Economic Inquiry, and served on theexecutive committee of the Western Economic Association.A. Neill Cameron, Jr.Vice President forUniversity AdvancementClemson University110 Daniel DriveClemson SC 29631864.656.0235cameron@clemson.eduNeill Cameron is a career marketing and communications professional.He is former president of Ogilvy & Mather Advertising, one of the world’sleading firms, and currently vice president of Clemson University incharge of activity with external audiences, as well as a member of theexecutive council. He has been involved in brand-buildingcommunications programs for clients such as American Express, Shell Oil,IBM, Kimberly Clark, International Paper, Centers for Disease Control,Union Carbide, World Wildlife Fund, and Eastman Kodak. Cameron haswon numerous industry awards and the 1995 Silver Medal forAdvertising’s Man of the Year. He is a frequent lecturer, nationally andinternationally, on marketing and communication topics and is a currentand past member of several boards including the Atlanta OrganizingCommittee for the 1996 Olympic Games. He is also a charter member ofQuail Unlimited and currently supports, among other organizations, DucksUnlimited, the South Carolina Waterfowl Association, the NatureConservancy, the World Wildlife Fund, and the Predator ConservationAlliance. Cameron holds a B.S. from Georgia State University, an M.B.A.from Emory University, and a certificate in international business from theLondon Business School.2

ABOUT THE FACULTYRobert ClementIndependent Consultant122 Saranac DrSunset SC 29685404.315.7813clembob@gmail.comRobert Clement is an investor and business consultant. He providesconsulting in the areas of business strategy, business operations, projectmanagement, and antitrust economics. In addition, Clement has lectured atthe PERC Enviropreneur Institute, Clemson University, Consortium ofUniversities for International Studies in Asolo, Italy, and the University ofNotre Dame. Previously, Clement had a 15-year career at Accenture, oneof the world’s largest technology consulting companies, from which heretired as a Partner in 2004. His work at Accenture included consultingwith several of the world’s largest telecommunications companies.Clement has also participated in a number of conferences on free marketenvironmentalism at PERC and the Liberty Fund. He lives in Sunset,South Carolina, with his wife Eydie and serves on the boards of PERC, theKeowee River Club, LLC, and the Reserve at Lake Keowee Foundation.Clement holds a B.S. in Economics and M.A. in Economics, both fromClemson University.Matt DunbarManaging DirectorUpstate Carolina AngelNetwork411 University RidgeSuite 211Greenville SC 29601864.320.1690matt@upstateangels.orgMatt Dunbar is managing director of the Upstate Carolina AngelNetwork, a group of accredited investors who support high-growth,start-up ventures in South Carolina and the Southeast. In his role asmanaging director, he is responsible for the day-to-day operations of theinvestor network, including coordination of the group’s efforts to screen,select, evaluate, and structure early stage investments. Dunbar began hiscareer as a manufacturing and plastics engineer with Eastman ChemicalCompany in Kingsport, Tennessee, and he later worked with severalFortune 500 clients as a strategy and management consultant with theBoston Consulting Group in Atlanta. He holds a B.S. in chemicalengineering from Clemson University and an M.B.A. and master’s degreein education from Stanford University.3

ABOUT THE FACULTYHank FischerSpecial ProjectsCoordinatorNational WildlifeFederation3342 Butler View LaneMissoula MT 59808-8709406.549.0761hfischer@centric.netHank Fischer is special projects coordinator for the National WildlifeFederation. From 1977–2002 he covered the Northern Rockies (Montana,Idaho and Wyoming) for Defenders of Wildlife. Fischer has beenintensively involved with endangered species restoration, particularlywith efforts involving wolves, grizzly bears, and black-footed ferrets. In1987 he created Defenders of Wildlife’s Wolf Compensation Trust,which uses private funds to compensate livestock producers for verifiedlivestock losses caused by wolves. In 1997 he created a similar programfor grizzly bears. Fischer was a leader in the ten-year effort to restorewolves to Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho, chronicled in his1995 book, Wolf Wars. More recently, he led a collaborative effortbetween conservationists, the timber industry and organized labor torestore grizzly bears to central Idaho. He has been involved in a variety ofissues involving public lands and has led efforts to create statewidewildlife viewing systems for Montana and Idaho. Fischer is author of theMontana Wildlife Viewing Guide (1993) and was project director for thepublication, Building Economic Incentives into the Endangered SpeciesAct. He holds an M.S. in environmental studies from the University ofMontana. He has won numerous awards, including the 2001 EdwardLowe Enviro-Capitalist Award.P. J. HillPERC Senior Fellow andProfessor Emeritus ofEconomicsWheaton CollegeDepartment of Business &Economics2048 Analysis DriveSuite ABozeman MT 59718708.752.5033p.j.hill@wheaton.eduP.J. Hill is professor emeritus of economics at Wheaton College andPERC senior fellow. Hill received his B.S. from Montana StateUniversity and his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. An economichistorian by training, Hill has written on institutional change and theevolution of property rights. His book with Terry Anderson, The Not SoWild, Wild West challenged many of the traditional theories of how theWest was settled. Rather than a place of anarchy and violence, it wascharacterized by local groups forming to solve collective action problems.Born and raised on a family ranch in eastern Montana, Hill hasmaintained an interest in cattle ranching while pursuing an academiccareer. He owns and operates a cattle ranch 35 miles west of Bozeman.4

ABOUT THE FACULTYAdam HuddlestonDirector of Training &DevelopmentCalifornia Pizza Kitchen6630 Winding TrailRaleigh NC 27612-2445919.816.5590ahuddleston@cpk.comAdam Huddleston is the director of training and development forCalifornia Pizza Kitchen. He has worked as a hospitality consultant andtaught communication studies, public speaking, English, technical writing,and theater criticism at various institutions around the country. Huddlestonhas facilitated workshops in textual design, rhetorical analysis,communication, and creative thinking in a variety of academic andprofessional arenas.J. Thornton KirbyPresident and CEOSouth Carolina HospitalAssociation210 Riverwalk Circle WestColumbia SC 29169803.331.4088tkirby@scha.orgThornton Kirby is a health care attorney and a Fellow in the AmericanCollege of Healthcare Executives. He speaks frequently on healthcaretopics, and he serves on a number of state and national boards. Kirby hasspent his career working with and for large organizations. As an attorneyand an administrator, he has influenced the strategic direction of hospitals,universities, and associations. His background is in policy andadministration, but he has worked closely with Neill Cameron over thepast decade to apply professional branding and communication techniquesin the arenas of organizational governance and legislative advocacy. Kirbybecame president and CEO of the South Carolina Hospital Association in2005, with the challenge of influencing state and federal health carepolicies by working with hospitals, physicians, business leaders, andelected officials. In 2010 South Carolina was recognized by the U.S.Department of Health & Human Services as one of the fastest improvingstates when it comes to healthcare quality. As a result of innovative,collaborative work by emergency physicians, cardiologists, and EMSleaders, South Carolina now ranks in the top 5 among all U.S. states indelivering timely care for patients suffering severe heart attacks.5

ABOUT THE FACULTYCharles KolstadProfessor of EnvironmentalEconomicsUniversity of CaliforniaDepartment of Economics2127 North Hall Mail Stop9210Santa Barbara CA 93106805.893.2108kolstad@econ.ucsb.eduCharles Kolstad is an internationally known economist who onceserved as a Peace Corps volunteer in Ghana and has taught atuniversities in the U.S, Russia, and Belgium. He is interested in therole information plays in environmental decision-making andregulation, and does much of his applied work in the area of climatechange and energy markets. He was a lead author for theIntergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (co-recipient of the 2007Nobel Peace Prize), was a member of the National Academy ofSciences committee charged with evaluating the U.S. Climate ChangeResearch Program, and is an advisor to the California Air ResourcesBoard. He is a former president of the Association of Environmentaland Resource Economists, and editor of the journal Review ofEnvironmental Economics & Policy. His more than 100 publicationsinclude the undergraduate text Environmental Economics. He iscurrently chair of the UCSB Department of Economics andco-director of the newly established UC Center for Energy &Environmental Economics, a joint undertaking of UC Berkeley andUCSB. He is a University Fellow at Resources for the Future and aResearch Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.Professor Kolstad earned a Ph.D. in Engineering-Economic Systemsfrom Stanford University, a M.A. in Mathematics from the Universityof Rochester, and his B.S. in Mathematics from Bates College.Robert E. McCormickPERC Senior Fellow andProfessor Emeritus ofEconomicsClemson University907 West Koch StreetBozeman MT 59715864.506.2224sixmile@clemson.eduBobby McCormick is professor emeritus of economics at ClemsonUniversity, a PERC Senior Fellow, and a 2001 PERC Julian SimonFellow. He was honored as the BB&T Scholar at Clemson Universitystarting in fall 2000 and was chosen as the MBA Professor of the Yearfor 2001. McCormick has served as a consultant to the U.S.Departments of Agriculture and Commerce and the Federal TradeCommission. He regularly consults and advises companies on financialmatters and provides expert courtroom testimony. He has testifiedbefore the U.S. Congress and the South Carolina legislature ontelecommunications and electricity deregulation and the future of thesemarkets, and has served as a consultant to the Treasury of New Zealandand the Canadian government. McCormick has been an associate editorof the Journal of Corporate Finance and the Southern EconomicJournal. He has published in a broad range of academic books andjournals on public policy, managerial and financial economics,telecommunications and electricity markets, sports and economics, andantitrust and industrial organization. McCormick received his B.A. andM.A. in economics from Clemson and received his Ph.D. in economicsfrom Texas A&M University. His favorite pastimes are golf,woodworking, and plowing. A tree farmer and hunter, he enjoys fewthings more than his tractor.6

ABOUT THE FACULTYKurt E. SchnierAssociate Professor ofEconomicsGeorgia State UniversityDepartment of EconomicsAndrew Young School ofPolicy Studies14 Marietta St. NW Ste 436Atlanta GA 30303404.413.0159kschnier@gsu.eduKurt Schnier is an associate professor of economics at the AndrewYoung School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University and a seniorresearch fellow at PERC. He is also the Co-Director of PERC’sEnviropreneur Institute. Schnier received a B.S. in management sciencesfrom the University of California at San Diego, an M.A. in environmentalstudies from the University of Pennsylvania, and his Ph.D. in economicsfrom the University of Arizona. His research is primarily focused onfacilitating the development of efficient marine resource policy anddetermining how fishermen respond to current and prospective fisheriesmanagement regimes. More specifically, his research has focused on thedevelopment and utilization of dynamic discrete choice models toevaluate fisheries policy, utilizing property rights to manage essential fishhabitat, the role of spatial externalities in resource management,estimation of capacity in fisheries, investigating heterogeneouspreferences, and risk-taking behavior in natural resource extractionindustries. In addition to his research in marine resource management, hehas been actively involved in research on charitable auctions and theprovision of public goods. He was a 2007 and 2009 Lone MountainFellow at PERC.Walter N. ThurmanPERC Senior Fellow andProfessor of Agricultural& Resource EconomicsNorth Carolina StateUniversityBox 81093314 NelsonRaleigh NC 27695-8109919.515.4545wally thurman@ncsu.eduWally Thurman is a William Neal Reynolds Distinguished Professor atNorth Carolina State University and a PERC Senior Fellow. He was aPERC 2003 Julian Simon Fellow. He is a Fellow of the Agricultural andApplied Economics Association and a recipient of that organization’sOutstanding Graduate Instructor Award as well as awards for hispublished research. He has served as an editor of the American Journal ofAgricultural Economics. Thurman studies the economics and politicaleconomy of agricultural and natural resource policy and has publishedwidely on these topics. His published work includes empirical studies ofquota schemes in the United States for peanuts and tobacco, analysis ofthe effects of the Clean Water and Clear Air Acts, compensation schemesin the poultry industry, and the drivers of commodity futures prices. Hecurrently is studying land trusts, markets for honey bee pollinationservices, and the economics of adaptation to environmental change.Thurman earned a B.A. degree in Environmental Studies from Utah StateUniversity, a Master’s degree in Economics from Montana StateUniversity, and a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Chicago.7

ABOUT THE FACULTYReed WatsonResearch Fellow andDirector of AppliedPrograms, PERC2048 Analysis Drive Suite ABozeman MT 59718406.587.9591reed@perc.orgReed Watson is a Research Fellow and the Director of Applied Programsat PERC. He is also the Co-Director of PERC’s Enviropreneur Institute.Watson’s expertise lies in developing and promoting market-basedsolutions to natural resource conflicts, particularly for water and wildlife.With Terry Anderson and Brandon Scarborough, he coauthored TappingWater Markets (RFF Press/Routledge). Independent of PERC, Watsonconsults resource managers, policy makers, and conservation organizationson environmental resource valuation and deal structuring. He hascompleted consulting projects in Washington, Idaho, Montana, Louisianaand Florida. Watson holds a J.D. and M.A. in Environmental Economicsfrom Duke University and a B.S. in Economics from Clemson University.Watson lives in Bozeman with his wife and two dogs. He is an avidoutdoorsman and enjoys trail running, skiing, and hunting.Steven L. YaffeeProfessor of NaturalResource and EnvironmentalPolicyUniversity of MichiganSchool of Natural Resourcesand Environment440 Church StreetAnn Arbor MI 48109-1041734.763.5451yaffee@umich.eduSteven Yaffee is Professor of Natural Resource and Environmental Policyat the University of Michigan. He also directs the School of NaturalResources and Environment’s Ecosystem Management Initiative, aresearch, teaching and outreach center focused on landscape-scaleconservation and sustainable management of natural resources. Yaffee hasworked for more than 30 years on federal endangered species, publiclands, and ecosystem management policy. He is the author of ProhibitivePolicy: Implementing the Federal Endangered Species Act (1982) and TheWisdom of the Spotted Owl: Policy Lessons for a New Century (1994). Hisresearch tracking the on-the-ground progress at more than a hundredcollaborative ecosystem management initiatives was first documented inEcosystem Management in the United States: An Assessment of CurrentExperience (1996). Yaffee’s most recent work focuses on multi-party,collaborative problem-solving efforts as necessary elements of anecosystem approach. The lessons from this research are summarized inMaking Collaboration Work: Lessons from Innovation in ResourceManagement (2000), a book coauthored with Julia Wondolleck. He hasfacilitated collaborative processes across North America. Yaffee also is afounding member of the editorial advisory board for Conservationmagazine. He received his Ph.D. in environmental policy and planningfrom the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His undergraduate andmaster’s degrees are in natural resources from the University of Michigan.Yaffee has been a faculty member at the Kennedy School of Governmentat Harvard University and a senior fellow at World Wildlife Fund.8

ABOUT THE ENVIROPRENEURS IN ACTIONTodd GartnerSenior AssociateConservation Incentives &MarketsPeople and EcosystemsProgramWorld Resources Institute10 G St NE #800Washington DC 20002410.790.4070tgartner7@yahoo.comTodd Gartner is a Senior Associate for the World Resources Institute’sPeople and Ecosystems Program. He focuses on developing new ways tofinance conservation though the use of conservation incentives andmarket-based strategies, such as biodiversity offsets, payments forwatershed services, and carbon markets. Todd works with a broad range ofstakeholders including landowners, regulators, Fortune 500 companies,and local partners to achieve conservation objectives both domesticallyand abroad. Gartner earned his Master of Forestry degree from the YaleSchool of Forestry and Environmental Studies and a B.S. in finance fromUniversity of Maryland’s Smith School of Business. Gartner’s previouswork included developing and running the Conservation Incentivesprogram at the American Forest Foundation, field forestry work in NewEngland, fire ecology and eco-tourism research in Botswana and India,business consulting for the USDA Forest Service and several years as acorporate financial consultant. He is also a Doris Duke ConservationFellow, Switzer Environmental Fellow, Environmental LeadershipProgram Fellow. Todd is a 2007 graduate of PERC’s EnviropreneurInstitute.Brett HowellWalker Conservation FellowGeorgia Aquarium701 Highland Ave NE#2419Atlanta GA 30312310.944.0757bwhowell1@gmail.comBrett Howell joined Georgia Aquarium in October 2011 as the WalkerConservation Fellow, with support from the Alex C. Walker Foundation toexplore applying market-based approaches to making coral reef restorationfinancially sustainable. Brett is testing the application of EcologicalEconomics and Marine Payment for Ecosystem Services (MPES) models,to apply concepts from real estate valuation to marine conservation.The project draws upon a variety of techniques, not traditionally applied tothe marine environment, to address long-term coral restoration andecosystem recovery. Brett’s academic and professional backgrounduniquely prepared him for this project. He received a Master’s of BusinessAdministration with an emphasis in Real Estate and Sustainability fromthe University of Colorado Leeds School of Business and a Bachelor ofScience in Communication with double majors in Environmental Planningand Public Relations from the University of Miami. Brett has more thanseven years of experience across real estate, engineering, environmental,and management consulting, working with Booz Allen Hamilton, CH2MHILL, YES! Communities, and PBS&J. Brett is a 2011 graduate ofPERC’s Enviropreneur Institute.9

ABOUT THE ENVIROPRENEURS IN ACTIONShannon MeyerWestern Conservation ManagerLand Trust Alliance417 Main St Ste GCarbondale CO 81623970.704.1313smeyer@lta.orgShannon Meyer is the Western Conservation Manager for the LandTrust Alliance based in Carbondale, Colorado. She works closely withland trusts in Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Nevada, Texas,and California to deliver Alliance services designed to enhance thecapacity and effectiveness of land trusts in the region. She alsocollaborates with state and regional associations of land trusts andspecific landscape level initiatives to advance the organizations’mutual goals. Shannon has worked as Associate Director of the AspenValley Land Trust (AVLT), and most recently as a consultant to landtrusts and landowners throughout the West. During her tenure atAVLT, Shannon managed the conservation, outreach and educationprograms and assisted with the organization’s fundraising program.She helped transition the organization from a locally focused group toa regional, accredited land trust. She has also served as the Director ofthe Western Colorado Agricultural Heritage Fund (WCAHF) and spentthree months with the Lyme Timber Company in New Hampshirelearning about their innovative approach to using investment funds toconserve large working forest landscapes. Shannon was assistant editorand a chapter author for the Lincoln Institute’s book on conservationfinance, “Conservation Capital in the Americas” with James Levitt ofHarvard University. She earned a master’s degree in EnvironmentalLaw and Policy from the University of Montana and a bachelor’s inEnvironmental Studies and Government from Bowdoin College.Shannon is a 2010 graduate of PERC’s Enviropreneur Institute.Michael ’t Sas-RolfesIndependent ConservationEconomistPostNet Suite 340 P BagX1005Claremont 7735South Africa 27 21 462 2167tsas.rolfes@gmail.comMichael ’t Sas-Rolfes is a sustainability economist, with uniqueexperience and understanding of the role of markets for biodiversityconservation. For the past 25 years, he has been actively involved invarious private conservation initiatives, starting as a financial managerof a private game reserve in South Africa. Mike conducted pioneeringresearch into the role of private markets for wildlife conservation inSouthern Africa, and worked with Francis Vorhies in setting up EcoPlus, an innovative consultancy on business, economics and theenvironment. His consulting experience includes work on issues asvaried as energy policy, environmental impact assessments,trans-frontier conservation areas, wildlife trade policy and institutionalreform in protected area management. He has written extensively onvarious conservation issues, especially relating to trade in endangeredspecies, and has been involved with teaching and supervision ofstudents. Mike has also worked and published with several think tanks,including the Free Market Foundation (South Africa), Institute ofEconomic Affairs Environment Unit (UK), International PolicyNetwork (UK) and the Property and Environment Research Center(PERC), where he was a 2011 Lone Mountain Fellow.10

ABOUT THE ENVIROPRENEURS IN ACTIONJames G. WorkmanSmartMarkets LLC245 Downey StreetSan Francisco CA 94117-4421415.702.9962jamesgworkman@gmail.comJamie Workman graduated cum laude with a B.A. in History fromYale and Oxford, but earned his real education blowing up dams,releasing wolves, igniting wildland fires, guiding safaris, and smugglingwater to besieged indigenous dissidents after breaking down in Africa’scentral Kalahari Desert. He began his ‘career’ as a prize-winninginvestigative journalist in Washington, D.C. where U.S. Secretary of theInterior Bruce Babbitt recruited him to help advance fire, fishery,endangered species, and river restoration policies. Overseas, he becamesenior adviser to the World Commission on Dams under NelsonMandela, then a communications consultant to corporations,governments, and international NGOs on natural resource policy,valuation, mitigation and adaptation. Now based in San Francisco,Jamie is an entrepreneurial co-founder of SmartMarkets, a start-upventure unlocking the value of water within utilities, and author of theaward-winning dramatic non-fiction narrative, Heart of Dryness: Howthe Last Bushmen Can Help Us Endure the Coming Age of PermanentDrought. Jamie is a 2005 graduate of PERC’s Enviropreneur Instituteand was a 2007 PERC Lone Mountain Fellow.11

Public Policy from the University of Colorado. 1. ABOUT THE FACULTY Daniel K. Benjamin PERC Senior Fellow and Alumni Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Economics, Clemson University 1192 Coan Harbour Drive Lottsburg VA 22511-2652 864.710.8198 wahoo@clemson.edu