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Boske visits the Imperial Palace in Beijing. |
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Boske's Summer Travels Reflect Trends in Globalization Associate Dean Leigh Boske traveled the globe this summer in an effort to increase the LBJ School's international involvement as well as lend his expertise in transportation finance, economics, and planning. From Beijing to Port-of-Spain, Boske's extensive summer itinerary reflected the growing importance of academic policy research in global economic integration and transportation. The first stop on Boske's whirlwind tour was Maastricht, Netherlands, where he attended a meeting of the Transatlantic Consortium for Public Policy Analysis and Education in May. The recently established consortium is trying to develop collaborative research efforts and exchanges between leading U.S. and European Community public affairs schools by defining emergent transatlantic public policy issues. Topics discussed included governance, regulation, and immigration. Boske's current post on the consortium's six-person executive committee will likely result in increased opportunities for LBJ School faculty, staff and student exchanges with European partner institutions. Next, Boske was off to Brussels, where he attended a meeting with members of the European Union (E.U.) Parliament. The central areas of discussion included telecommunications and the expansion of EU membership. Boske was primarily interested in discussions concerning bilateral negotiations of a U.S.-E.U. open skies air policy. Within a month of returning home to Austin, Boske headed to Beijing, People's Republic of China, where he participated in an international forum of transportation professionals sponsored by the China Association for Science and Technology. One aspect of his presentation, titled "Global Diversity in Public Transport Policies, Plans, and Programs," defined the need for international collaboration among the private and public sectors in developing transportation policy. The last leg of Boske's summer travels led him to the Caribbean island of Trinidad in September, where he attended two official meetings in Port-of-Spain dealing with hemispheric transportation policy development. The first, sponsored by the Association of Caribbean States (ACS), was designed to draft a Common Air Policy and streamline the maritime policy of the ACS's 25 member states. Boske then participated in the Experts' Meeting on Maritime Transport in the Caribbean, sponsored by the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). Boske said he soon discovered that he was the only academic at these meetings, which were otherwise comprised of voting delegates from member states. He soon became known as the non-voting "delegate of the University of Texas." Boske's international travels demonstrated that he is not only a world-class transportation expert but also an essential link between academia and governments in the growing arena of global economic integration. In addition to his involvement in international conferences and consortiums, Boske continues to lead policy research initiatives that respond to real-world transportation policy issues and that are commissioned by international organizations. A prime example is his most recent policy research project report Transportation in the Americas: Its Role in International Trade, Economic Integration, and Sustainable Development, which was funded by the Organization of American States (OAS). Boske is also conducting research on Western Hemispheric maritime transportation and ports in collaboration with ECLAC. Boske's summer globetrotting came to a close with the beginning of the fall semester, but his travels are far from over. By late September, his expertise in transportation policy drew him to Fort Worth, Texas, where he participated in a visioning session hosted by the U.S. Department of Transportation to discuss the future of transportation in the United States. October 10, 2000 |
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News and Events Fall 2000 News Briefs ©2000
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs October 11, 2000 Comments to: lbjwmast@uts.cc.utexas.edu |
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