Professor Emeritus, Food Research Institute, 2002-present, Senior
Fellow, Stanford Institute for International Studies, 1994-present,
Convenor, European Forum, 1997-2003, Director, Center for European
Studies, 1993-1996, Co-Chair, International Relations and International
Policy Studies Programs, 1992-1994, Professor, Food Research Institute,
1978-2002, Stanford University
Professor
of Agricultural Economics, 1974-1977, University of Reading
Reader
in Applied Economics, 1973-1974, Lecturer in Economics, 1968-1973,
Assistant Lecturer, Economics Department, 1968, London School
of Economics
Ph.D.
1967, Agricultural Economics, Michigan State University
M.Sc.
1965, Agricultural Economics, University of Guelph
B.Sc.
1963, Agriculture, Wye College, University of London
CAES
M.Sc Thesis Award, 1965
AAEA
Ph.D Thesis Award, 1967
Minnesota
Prize for Distinguished Trade Policy Contribution, 1990
AAEA
Excellence in Communication Award (runner up), 2000
Chair,
Executive Committee, International Agricultural Trade Research
Consortium, 2003-present
Tim
Josling has devoted his career to the study of agricultural
policies and their interaction through the trade system. He made
important policy contributions in the 1970s to the debate on the
accession of the UK to the European Community, to the development
of measures of the transfers inherent in farm policies for the
FAO, and to the debates about international commodity stabilization
schemes. In the 1980s he worked on issues related to the GATT
Uruguay Round and the negotiation of the Agreement on Agriculture.
More recently he has been instrumental in expanding the debate
about agricultural trade to include issues of state trading, of
sanitary and phytosanitary regulations, and of trade remedies.
Currently he is working on the continued reform of agricultural
trade rules and the implications of regional and bilateral trade
pacts.
Tim has taught at the London School of Economics, the University
of Reading and Stanford University. He was a Professor in the
Food Research Institute from 1978 until its closure in 1996. He
has been responsible for the European program of the Stanford
Institute for International Studies.
He has been active in a number of professional organizations and
is presently Chair of the Executive Committee of the International
Agricultural Trade Research Consortium.