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2006 Tech Awards Judges

Economic Development


Alexander J. Field, Chair
Michael and Mary Orradre Professor of Economics
Santa Clara University

Alexander J. Field is the Michel and Mary Orradre Professor of Economics at Santa Clara University. A member of Phi Beta Kappa and Beta Gamma Sigma, his research and teaching interests span macroeconomic theory and policy, technological and institutional change, American and European economic history, and the influence of evolutionary/biological forces on human nature. His most recent publications include Altruistically Inclined? The Behavioral Sciences, Evolutionary Theory, and the Origins of Reciprocity (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001) and "The Most Technologically Progressive Decade of the Century," American Economic Review (September 2003). Alexander's administrative positions at Santa Clara University have included chair of the Economics Department, Associate Dean and acting Dean of the Business School, acting Academic Vice President, and member of the school's Board of Trustees. He received his A.B. from Harvard University (1970), his M.Sc. from the London School of Economics (1971) and his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley (1974). He taught previously at Stanford University.

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Anthony Bettencourt
Chief Executive Officer
Autonomy ZANTAZ

Anthony Bettencourt is currently serving as the Chief Executive Officer of Autonomy ZANTAZ in San Francisco, CA. Previously, Anthony was Chief Executive of Verity, Inc., where he was responsible for driving business growth from $15 million in annual revenues to more than $140 million between 1995 to 2006. A veteran of the enterprise search market, Anthony led the team that set the strategic direction and execution characteristics of Verity, resulting in the company being acquired for more than $500 million at the end of 2005. In 2005, Anthony was awarded the prestigious Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year award for software and technology in the Silicon Valley. Anthony serves as a judge for the Valley’s well known Tech Awards, is a mentor for Santa Clara University’s Global Social Benefit Incubator Program, and is an honorary committee member of The Silicon Valley Challenge Summit. He serves on the Board of Directors of Avolent as well as on the Board of Directors of the non-profit Alameda County Meals on Wheels. Anthony attended Santa Clara University.

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Dan Crisafulli
Senior Program Officer
The Skoll Foundation

Daniel Crisafulli is a Senior Program Officer at the Skoll Foundation, where he leads field-building initiatives in social entrepreneurship through grantmaking and for-profit investments.

Prior to joining the Skoll Foundation, Dan comanaged the Development Marketplace (DM), the World Bank's social entrepreneurship and innovation program, beginning in 2004. He led the expansion of the DM from a $3.5 million to a $10 million annual program by expanding its on-the-ground activities in developing countries and by mobilizing 80 percent of its funding from external partners in private industry and government. He brought a venture capital approach to the DM by taking a hands-on role in the success of investees. The DM's model of support for small-scale solutions to social and economic challenges was designated a "best practice" in corporate innovation by the Harvard Business Review.

Dan developed a venture approach toward investing as Investment Officer and cofounder of the technology venture capital group at the International Finance Corporation (IFC), which he joined in 2000. At IFC, he built an investment program focusing on early-stage technology companies with social impact and served on the boards of several early-stage companies. He initiated the IFC's $20 million investment in NewPath, an India/US semiconductor design company, and its $10 million investment in Pakistan's TRG.

Dan's earlier work at the World Bank focused on technology, finance and small business investment. In 1998 he led a $750 million technology and science reform program in Mexico that resulted in the country's first major technology policy reform in more than 25 years. Dan began his career with the London-based consultancy L|E|K Partnership, a leading adviser in the field of mergers and acquisitions.

Dan earned a bachelor's degree in government 'summa cum laude' from Dartmouth College and a master's degree in public policy from the Kennedy School at Harvard University, where he was a Kennedy Scholar.

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Linda Kamas
Associate Professor of Economics
Santa Clara University

Linda Kamas is an Associate Professor of Economics at Santa Clara University. She teaches courses in Economic Development in Latin America, Macroeconomics, and International Economics. Her research has focused on international macroeconomic topics in Latin America including inflation, exchange rate regimes, and macroeconomic policy. Her work has been published in journals such as Journal of Development Studies, Journal of Development Economics, and Journal of International Money and Finance. Linda's current research program examines the effect of moral values on economic behavior and gender differences in altruistic actions. Working with students at Santa Clara University, she recently founded a scholarship fund to provide financing to Salvadoran students to attend the University of Central America.

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Reiji Sano
Lifetime Honorary Member of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co.
Japan

Distinguished Visiting Fellow
Center for Science, Technology, and Society
Santa Clara University

Before joining SCU, Reiji Sano was the chairman of CTI/BIAC and chairman of The Preparation Committee for "Japan-Russia Advanced Science Technology Exchange Forum." He was a former CTO of Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. (MEI), in charge of managing fourteen overseas research laboratories as well as many labs in Japan and established Panasonic Digital Concepts Center at Cupertino, Silicon Valley. Reiji was the founding chairman of "ECHONET" consortium.

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Drew Starbird
Professor, Operations & Management Information Systems
Breetwor Fellow
Santa Clara University

Drew Starbird is a professor in the Leavey School of Business (LSB) as well as the Faculty Director for the Undergraduate Business Programs. Drew did his undergraduate study at UC Davis and received a MBA from Santa Clara and a Ph.D. from Cornell University. He began teaching at Santa Clara in 1987 and has served on the LSB rank and tenure committee, the dean's search committee, and as chair of the MBA policy committee and undergraduate leadership team. Drew also serves on the Faculty Core Committee on Diversity, which is implementing the 2009 University Core Curriculum. He teaches statistics and operations management at the undergraduate, MBA, and executive MBA levels. His research interests focus on the economics of information about quality with a particular interest in food safety.

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