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The Haas School of Business PhD Program offers six fields of academic study: Accounting, Business and Public Policy, Finance, Marketing, Management of Organizations, and Real Estate. The program admits 14-16 candidates per year, and students can expect to graduate in four to five years.
Zygmunt J. Haas is a professor and distinguished chair in computer science, University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) also the professor emeritus in electrical and computer engineering, Cornell University. His research interests include ad hoc networks, [ 1 ] wireless networks , [ 2 ] sensor networks , [ 3 ] and zone routing protocols.
Jennifer A. Chatman, an American academic, is the interim dean of the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley [1] and the Paul J. Cortese Distinguished Professor of Management.
Ingrid Johnsen Haas is an American political scientist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. [1] She is an expert on political behavior, social psychology, and cognitive neurosciences. [ 2 ] She researches the effect of emotions and identity on the expression of political attitudes.
John A. Powell (born 1947) is an American law professor. He leads the UC Berkeley Othering & Belonging Institute [1] (formerly known as Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society [2]) and holds the Robert D. Haas Chancellor's Chair in Equity and Inclusion, Professor of Law and Professor of African American Studies and Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law.
Neofunctionalism is a theory of regional integration which downplays globalisation and reintroduces territory into its governance. Neofunctionalism is often regarded as the first European integration theory developed by Ernst B. Haas in 1958 as part of his PhD research on the European Coal and Steel Community. [1]
Henry William Chesbrough (born 1956) is an American organizational theorist, adjunct professor and the faculty director of the Garwood Center for Corporate Innovation at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley and Maire Tecnimont Chair of Open Innovation at Luiss. He is known for coining the term open innovation. [1]
Teece taught at Stanford Graduate School of Business from 1975 until 1982, when he was hired by the Haas School of Business at U.C. Berkeley, where he is a chaired professor. [2] [4] He has published more than 200 academic articles and more than a dozen books, [2] [9] and Google Scholar notes that he has been cited at least 170,000 times.