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Former IAS Senior Visiting Fellow
Prof Kingsley E. HAYNES
University Professor Emeritus of Public Policy
George Mason University
Research Areas:
Resources and Environmental Management Policy, Urban and Regional Economic Development and Planning, Economic Geography and Regional Science, Social Systems Modeling and Policy Analysis, Infrastructure and Transportation Policy

Prof. Kingsley Haynes received his PhD in Geography and Environmental Engineering from the Johns Hopkins University. He was then on the faculty of the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin in 1974–1978, the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University in 1978–1987, and the Department of Geography and Public Policy Program in Boston University in 1987–1990. He joined the George Mason University in 1990 as the Dean of the Graduate School and the Founding Dean of the School of Public Policy which he led until 2010. He is the former Ruth D. Hazel and John T. Hazel, M.D. Faculty Chair in Public Policy and currently Professor Emeritus of Public Policy.

Prof. Haynes’s academic interests include transportation and telecommunication infrastructure investment, regional economic development, and analytic modeling for decision support. He has directed numerous research grants and contracts, co-authored or edited 10 books and over 400 articles and professional reports. He is in the editorial board of several journals including Journal of Urban Management, The Annals of Regional Science: An International Journal of Urban Regional and Environmental Research and Policy, and Geographical Analysis: An International Journal of Theoretical Geography.

Prof. Haynes has been involved in regional economic development policy and natural resource management since the early 1970s. In US, He has worked with various departments of the state governments and the federal government on regional projects such as in Montana’s Yellowstone Basin, the Lake Michigan and Ohio River regions and the Texas Gulf Coast. Internationally, he directed programs for the Ford Foundation’s Office of Resources and Environment on the Nile River-Lake Nasser regions of Egypt and the Sudan. Besides, he was an originating member of the Decision, Risk and Management Sciences Panel of the National Science Foundation and served as a member of the board of the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s Social, Economic and Political Sciences Section. In 2002, he was elected to Fellow of the US National Academy in Public Administration. He received numerous awards and accolades for his work and service including the North American Regional Science Council’s David Boyce Award in 1997, the James R. Anderson Medal of Honor in Applied Geography and the Edward L. Ullman Award in Transportation Geography, both by The Association of American Geographers, in 2000 and 2003 respectively.

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