Gatton College of Business and Economics
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Gatton College of Business and Economics is a college of the University of Kentucky. Founded in 1925, it was not given the current name "Gatton College of Business and Economics" until 1996 after a large monetary gift to the University in 1995 from Carol Martin "Bill" Gatton. The donation was the largest in the history of the University. In his honor, the Board of Trustees named the college after him [4]. The current dean of Gatton College of Business and Economics is Dean Sudharshan.
The college is located in central campus along South Limestone.
Contents |
[edit] Academic units
- Von Allmen School of Accountancy
- Decision Science and Information Systems
- Department of Economics
- Finance
- Management
- Marketing
- School of Management
[edit] Degrees offered
- Bachelor of Science in Accounting
- Bachelor Degrees in Economics
- Bachelor in Business Administration - Decision Science and Information Systems
- Bachelor in Business Administration - Finance
- Bachelor in Business Administration - Marketing
- Bachelor in Business Administration - Management
- Masters of Business Administration
- Masters of Science in Accounting
- Ph.D. in Business Administration with a specialization in Accounting
- Masters of Science in Economics
- Ph.D. in Economics
- Ph.D. in Business Administration
- Decision Science and Information Systems
- Finance
- Management
- Marketing
[edit] Centers
LINKS International Center for Social Network Research is a center for the study of social networks within and between organizations. The center's website is http://networklinks.org/Index.html
Gatton College of Business and Economics houses The Center for Business and Economic Research (CBER). Kenneth Troske is currently the director of CBER who was preceded by Professor Mark Berger who held the position until his death in 2003.
The Kentucky Business Environmental Assistance Program, also housed within Gatton College of Business and Economics, provides free and confidential environmental services for small businesses.
The Von Allmen Center for Entrepreneurship is also housed within Gatton College of Business and Economics.
Kentucky Small Business Development Center is headquartered within Gatton. KSBDC has fourteen service centers around Kentucky
[edit] Gatton Business and Economics Building
Constructed in the 1960s as the Commerce Building, it was renovated and expanded with a new wing for classrooms in 1992 [1]. The original 1960s wing contains graduate and faculty offices for the accounting and economic departments and includes the MBA center. It also features one large auditorium. The 1992 extension added a new three-floor atrium, a new computer laboratory, and 24 classrooms.
Studies began in the early 2000s for a new College of Business and Economics structure. A 2002 study suggested that if a new College of Business and Economics structure was to be constructed, it should relocate closer to downtown Lexington [2]. The location for the new building will be at Martin Luther King Boulevard and Avenue of the Champions adjacent to New North Hall (University of Kentucky) and Memorial Coliseum. This would create a "symbolic link" between the University and downtown, the study suggested.
Funding for the $80 million structure, $40 million of which would come from private donors, would construct a new facility for classrooms, offices, a computer lab and a library [3]. A parking structure would be included behind Memorial Coliseum as part of the project.
Construction funding priority is number one for the University in the 2008 state legislative session. The current corner property is currently a surface parking lot that features 272 spaces [4].
[edit] References
- ^ "Gatton Business and Economics Building." University of Kentucky. 19 Nov. 2006 [http://ukcc.uky.edu/cgi-bin/dynamo?maps.391+campus+0034.
- ^ Martin, Kristi. "Colleges ponder downtown move." 4 April 2002. Kentucky Kernel. 19 Nov. 2006 [1].
- ^ Fritter, Jami. "B&E outgrowing its current home." 4 April 2002. Kentucky Kernel. 22 Nov. 2006 [2].
- ^ Sichko, Adam. "Vanishing spaces." 5 January 2006. Kentucky Kernel. 19 Nov. 2006 [3].