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Ron Huberman, CEO of Chicago Public Schools, previously president of the Chicago Transit Authority; Jörg Kukies, German Minister of Finance (2024-) Christina Liu (MBA, PhD), former finance minister of Taiwan (2012) Jack Markell, 1985, Governor of Delaware; Peter G. Peterson, (1972–73) U.S. Secretary of Commerce; chairman of The Blackstone Group
The college established a Master of Business Administration program in 1948 and launched the Graduate School of Business. The college, including the Graduate School of Business, moved to its current Chicago location in the DePaul Center, 1 E. Jackson Blvd., in 1993. In 1971, Commerce established its first center, the Small Business Institute.
Jeremy Siegel, Professor of Finance at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, creator of the Siegel's paradox and CNBC commentator (former faculty member) Richard Thaler , Nobel Prize-winning behavioral economist, considered "father of behavioral finance", cited as significant influence on bridging psychology and economics in ...
Chicago School of literary criticism – group of faculty members at the University of Chicago (R.S. Crane, Elder Olson, Wayne Booth) who founded neo-Aristotelianism [note 1] J. M. Coetzee – 2003 Nobel Prize laureate in Literature; distinguished professor in the Committee on Social Thought
The Chicago school economist who warned years ago of America’s ‘business dynamism’ fading still sees ‘something broken in the background’ Rachel Shin August 12, 2023 at 7:00 AM
In 2015, Loyola's Quinlan School of Business was ranked by U.S. News & World Report as Chicago's No. 1 undergraduate business school, [6] as well as a top 3 MBA program in Chicago. [7] [8] The school's graduate program has been named a top 20 part-time MBA program in the nation by Businessweek.
The Chicago Business College (founded as the Gondering and Virden Business College in 1888) was a for-profit business school located at 67 Wabash Avenue in downtown Chicago, Illinois. It was run by Frederick B. Virden, who founded or purchased several such schools in subsequent years.
The University of Chicago Booth School of Business traces its roots to 1898 when university faculty member James Laurence Laughlin chartered the College of Commerce and Politics, [6] which was intended to be an extension of the school's founding principles of "scientific guidance and investigation of great economic and social matters of everyday importance."