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Walter
P. Falcon 1990
Fellow
- Helen
C. Farnsworth Professor of International Agricultural
Policy, Stanford University, 1976-present.
- Director,
Food Research Institute, Stanford University, 1972-present;
Professor, Food Research Institute, and Department of
Economics, 1972-present.
- Senior
Associate Dean, School of Humanities and Sciences, Stanford
University, 1988-present; Associate Dean, School of
Humanities and Sciences, 1985-88.
- Deputy
Director, Development Advisory Service, Harvard University,
1970-72; (Director of Research, 1966-70); Assistant
Professor, Department of Economics, Harvard University,
1963-66.
- Chairman,
Board of Trustees, International Rice Research Institute,
1989-present (Member, 1987-88); Member, Board of Trustees,
International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, 1980-87.
- Member,
Board of Trustees, Winrock International, 1984-present;
Chairman, Board of Trustees, Agricultural Development
Council 1979-83.
- Member,
Presidential Commission on World Hunger, 1978-80.
- AAEA
Quality of Communication Award, 1984; AAEA Award for
Outstanding Article in the American Journal of Agricultural
Economics, 1979.
- Editor,
Food Research Institute Studies, 1977-present;
Advisory Council, CHOICES, 1968-97; Editorial
Council, American Journal of Agricultural Economics,
1968-72; Associate Editor, Quarterly Journal of Economics,
1963-72.
- Consultant,
Agency for International Development, Food Foundation,
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development;
Senior Food Policy Advisor, Government of Indonesia.
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Walter
P. Falcon has compiled a distinguished record of research, teaching,
administration, and service in the international agricultural
policy and development arena. Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Falcon
received his B.S. in agricultural economics from Iowa State University.
He went on to Harvard University, where he earned M.A. and Ph.D.
degrees in economics. Falcon remained at Harvard for nearly a
decade, first in the Economics Department as an assistant professor
and then in the Development Advisory Service (now the Harvard
Institute for International Development). In 1972, Falcon moved
to Stanford University as a director of the Food Research Institute.
Among Falcon's publications are six books and more than fifty
articles, reviews, and reports. His research reflects a lifelong
interest in and commitment to international economic development.
Early work focused on Pakistan. He was a member of the White House-Interior
Department Panel on Pakistan, whose 1964 report was one of the
first modern analyses of the conjunctive use of the surface and
groundwater and its role in the agricultural development of the
Indus Basin. In 1978, he co-authored a major retrospective look
at both the policies implemented and the remaining problems in
the Indus Basin.
Technology transfer issues have also figured importantly in Falcon's
research. His 1970 assessment "The Green Revolution Generations
of Problems," was one of the first articles to bring together
the controversial issues of production effects, marketing needs,
and potential social consequences of technical change with the
perspective of someone who had been involved extensively in the
field.
Falcon also has been co-principal investigator of six studies
of major commodity systems, each of which examined the objectives
of national food policies, the forces constraining those policies,
and the consequences of those policies on commodity trade and
the prospects for country or regional development. Work on the
cassava, corn, and rice market systems in Indonesia all resulted
in books, as did the study of rice market systems in West Africa.
The study of the political economy of rice in Asia comprised two
monographs.
Hundreds of Stanford students have learned about American agricultural
policy in his annual course. He is currently involved in a Ford
Foundation project to revise the undergraduate curriculum at Stanford
to include significantly more international material and perspectives.
This year he added his own new course, The World Food Economy,
for undergraduates. He has been the mentor, either formally or
informally, to virtually every Institute graduate student. Falcon's
commitment to teaching is perhaps nowhere more evident than in
the series of short courses on food policy analysis he and two
colleagues created for senior government officers from five ministries
in Indonesia. Their lectures were the foundation for the award-winning
book, Food Policy Analysis.
One of Falcon's most important contributions to the profession
has been as an administrator, where he is truly an institution
builder. As director of the Institute, he has undertaken major
funding initiatives that have enhanced significantly the productivity
and visibility of its faculty; have broadened its disciplinary
core to include nutrition, demography, and resource policy; and
have financed its commitment to training both first and third
world economists. His ability as an administrator have not gone
unnoticed, either in the university where he is now senior associate
dean in the School of Humanities and Sciences, or in the international
community where he is now chairman of the board of trustees at
I.R.R.I. and a member of the board of Winrock.
Perhaps the ultimate reflection of his many skills is in his continuing
role as a senior food policy advisor to the Government of Indonesia.
Because of his insightful analysis and forthright discussions
of key issues, combined with remarkable interpersonal skills and
the political sensitivities required of an expatriate advisor,
Falcon has been invited to return every year for more than twenty
to assist several ministers in the analysis of food and agriculture
issues.
Together, Falcon's contributions are extraordinary--researcher
and policy analyst, teacher and mentor, and administrator and
institution builder. All are in the finest tradition of exceptional
service by AAEA Fellows.
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