Mark A. Cohen
Professor of Economics, Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility
Vice President, Research - Resources for the Future
Professor of Law
Subject Area(s):
Strategy and Business Economics, Ethics and Social Responsibility
Biography:
Note: As of September 1, 2008, Professor Cohen will be on sabbatical from Vanderbilt, and will be joining Resources for the Future as Vice President for Research. He can be reached at cohen@rff.org.
Mark Cohen has extensive experience - as both a government economist and an academic - analyzing government enforcement policies with particular emphasis on environmental and criminal justice issues. A leading expert on enforcing environmental regulations and on corporate crime and punishment, Professor Cohen has published over 85 articles and books on such diverse topics as the effect of community "right to know" laws on firm behavior; why firms reduce toxic chemical emissions; cost-benefit analysis of oil spill regulation and enforcement; how the financial markets value corporate environmental policies and performance; and government enforcement policy and judicial sentencing of individuals and firms convicted of environmental crimes. He has also written extensively on the "cost of crime." Prior to joining the Owen faculty in 1986, Professor Cohen was a senior economist with the U.S. Sentencing Commission. He also served as a staff economist at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.
Professor Cohen previously served as Chairman of the American Statistical Association's Committee on Law and Justice Statistics. He has also been a member of Tennessee's Environmental Justice Steering Committee. Professor Cohen is a member of the Stakeholder Council of the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), a multi-stakeholder Collaborating Centre of the United Nations Environment Programme, dedicated to developing and disseminating globally applicable sustainability reporting guidelines. He has recently served as a member of the U.S. EPA Science Advisory Board's Illegal Competitive Advantage Economic Benefit Advisory Panel; and the General Accounting Office's Expert Panel on Disclosure of Environmental Information in SEC filings. He is also a Co-Director of the Vanderbilt Center for Environmental Management Studies (VCEMS), and the Leverhulme Visiting Professor at the University of York (U.K.).
Professor Cohen recently co-hosted a conference entitled, "Is Corporate Social Responsibility Serious Business?" held in Washington, DC at the American Enterprise Institute. He recently presented a paper on "Why Do Firms Comply (and sometimes 'Over-comply') with Environmental Regulations?" at the Conference on Economic Aspects of Environmental Compliance Assurance, Paris, France(sponsored by OECD Global Forum on Sustainable Development). He also presented a paper, "Oil Pollution Prevention and Enforcement Measures and their Effectiveness: a Survey of Empirical Research from the U.S." at the International Conference on Marine (Oil) Pollution Prevention and Legal Remedies, Nanjing China (sponsored by Shanghai Maritime University, Maastrichts Univ. and Catholic University of Leuven). In 2005, he was honored by Money Magazine as a "Class Act of 2004" for his work on racial disparity in the auto lending industry.
Education:
B.S.F.S., International Economics, Georgetown University, 1978
M.A., Economics, Carnegie-Mellon University, 1983
Ph.D., Economics, Carnegie-Mellon University, 1985
Course(s) Taught:
- MGT 427: Economics of Organizations
- MGT 455: The Law and Business of Climate Change
Other Course(s):
Economics of Organizations;
Corporate Strategies for Environmental and Social Responsibility;
Nonmarket Strategies;
Environmental Issues in Operations;
Environmental Issues in Marketing
Research Interest(s):
Law and economics; government regulation; white-collar and corporate crime; and environmental management and sustainability.
Area(s) of Expertise:
Environmental regulation; criminal justice issues; corporate crime and punishment; street crime; consumer protection and discriminatory lending practices; microeconomics; and public policy analysis.
Article(s):
Cohen, Mark A. and V. Santhakumar, “Information Disclosure as Environmental Regulation: A Theoretical Analysis.” Environmental and Resource Economics 37(3): 599-620 (July 2007).
Cohen, Mark A., Roland T. Rust, and Sara Steen, "Prevention, Crime Control or Cash? Public Preferences towards Criminal Justice Spending Priorities," Justice Quarterly (forthcoming, 2006).
Cohen, Mark A. The Costs of Crime and Justice (New York, NY: Routledge, 2005); ISBN 0-415-70072-8 (hardback), 0-415-70073-6 (paperback).
Cohen, Mark A., Roland Rust, Sara Steen, and Simon Tidd, "Willingness-to-Pay for Crime Control Programs." Criminology 42(1): 86-106 (February 2004).
Cohen, Mark A. and Ted R. Miller, "'Willingness to Award' Nonmonetary Damages and the Implied Value of Life from Jury Awards," International Review of Law and Economics 23: 165-81 (June 2003).
Brunnermeier, Smita and Mark A. Cohen, "Determinants of Environmental Innovation in U.S. Manufacturing Industries," Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 45(2): 278-93 (March 2003).
Cohen, Mark A. "Transparency after 9/11: Balancing the "Right-to-Know" with the Need for Security," Corporate Environmental Strategy, 9(4): 368-74 (2002).
Konar, Shameek and Mark A. Cohen, "Does the Market Value Environmental Performance?" Review of Economics and Statistics 83 (2): 281-9 (May 2001).
Cohen, Mark A. "Information as a Policy Instrument in Protecting the Environment: What Have We Learned?" Environmental Law Reporter 31: 10425-31 (April 2001).
Cohen, Mark A. "Empirical Research on the Deterrent Effect of Environmental Monitoring and Enforcement," Environmental Law Reporter, 30: 10245-52 (April 2000).
Cohen, Mark A. "Measuring the Costs and Benefits of Crime and Justice." Chapter in Volume 4 (pp. 263-316): Measurement and Analysis of Crime and Justice," Criminal Justice 2000. National Institute of Justice, July 2000, NCJ 182411; available at http://www.ncjrs.org/criminal_justice2000/vol_4/04f.pdf.
Cohen, Mark A. "Monitoring and Enforcement of Environmental Policy," International Yearbook of Environmental and Resource Economics 1999/2000, edited by Tom Tietenberg and Henk Folmer; Edward Elgar publishers, 1999, pages 44-106.
Environmental Information Disclosure and Stakeholder Involvement: Searching for Common Ground
Cohen, Mark A. "The Monetary Value of Saving a High Risk Youth," Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 14 (1): 5-33 (1998).
Konar, Shameek and Mark A. Cohen, "Information As Regulation: The Effect of Community Right to Know Laws on Toxic Emissions," Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 32(1): 109-124 (1997).
Cohen, Mark A. "Firm Response to Environmental Pressures," Managerial and Decision Economics. Guest Editor of Special Issue with seven refereed articles (including Introduction, pp. 417-20). Volume 18 (1997).
Presentation(s) and Proceeding(s):
Cohen, Mark A. "Oil Pollution Prevention and Enforcement Measures and their Effectiveness: a Survey of Empirical Research from the U.S." in Proceedings of International Conference on Marine (Oil) Pollution: Legal Remedies in China, Europe and the US. Volume in Comparative Environmental Law & Policy Series, Kluwer Law International, Eric W. Orts & Kurt Deketelaere eds., (forthcoming, 2005).
"Why Do Firms Comply (and sometimes 'Over-comply') with Environmental Regulations?" Conference on Economic Aspects of Environmental Compliance Assurance, Paris, France, December 2-3, 2004 (sponsored by OECD Global Forum on Sustainable Development).
"Oil Pollution Prevention and Enforcement Measures and their Effectiveness: a Survey of Empirical Research from the U.S."
"The Cost of Crime: Methods and Findings from Past & Recent Research" European Seminar on Costs and the Distribution of Costs of Crime and Disorder and Crime Prevention, Helsinki, Finland, April 1-2, 2004 (sponsored by Finnish National Council for Crime Prevention, Swedish Council for Crime Prevention, and European Commission).
"Corporate Sustainability Reporting," International Petroleum Industry Environmental Conservation/American Petroleum Institute Workshop on CSR/Sustainability Reporting, San Francisco, CA. April 3, 2003.
Media Mentions:
Recent media mentions include:
Wall Street Journal (2005) on socially responsible investing; Washington Post (2004), Los Angeles Times (2004), Houston Chronicle (2004), Philadelphia Inquirer (2005), and New York Times (2005) on racial disparity in auto lending; Chief Executive (2008) on corporate sustainability programs; Tennessee Business (2008) on "greening" of MBA programs.
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