Richard Parker (economist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other people with this name, see Richard Parker (disambiguation).

Richard Parker is an economist from the USA. He is a graduate of Dartmouth College and the University of Oxford, and has worked for the United Nations Development Programme. Parker cofounded Mother Jones magazine and is on the editorial board of The Nation. He wrote the books The myth of the middle class, Mixed signals: the future of global television news, and John Kenneth Galbraith: The Making of American Economics.

Parker has held Marshall, Rockefeller, Danforth, Goldsmith, and Bank of America fellowships; and is lecturer in public policy and senior fellow at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, where he teaches a class titled "Religion, Politics and Public Policy."

[edit] References


[edit] External links

This article about an economist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.