Madhavi Venkatesan
Madhavi Venkatesan is an American economist and environmental activist. She is an associate teaching professor of economics at Northeastern University.
Madhavi Venkatesan | |
---|---|
Academic background | |
Education | Vanderbilt University (BS, MS, PhD) |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Economics |
Institutions | Northeastern University Bridgewater State University |
Main interests | Sustainability |
Biography
Venkatesan received her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. in Economics from Vanderbilt University.[1] She then held senior level positions in investor relations for three Fortune 250 companies in the insurance sector.[1] In 2014, she re-entered academic employment as an assistant professor of Economics at Bridgewater State University[1] and in 2017, she joined the faculty of the Department of Economics at Northeastern University as an assistant teaching professor.[2]
Venkatesan traveled to the Philippines in 2018 as the Fulbright-SyCip Distinguished Lecturer.[3] In 2019 she published her fourth text, SDG8 - Sustainable Economic Growth and Decent Work for All.[4]
As of April 2021, Venkatesan serves as the editor in chief of Sustainability and Climate Change.[5]
Research
Venkatesan's academic interests include the integration of sustainability into the economics curriculum.[6] [7] [8] She has been active in promoting education and stakeholder engagement to incorporate ethics into the existing economic framework[9][10] and her written work has largely focused on these topics as a catalyst to promoting sustainability. Venkatesan has also contributed to the literature on the relationship between culture, sustainability and economics, addressing the relationship between economic systems and cultural convergence.[11] [12] She is an advocate for changing the quantitative focus of present economic goals (e.g., GDP, income) to qualitative attributes of well-being that acknowledge and incorporate the interconnectivity, known and unknown, in human decision-making. [13]
Sustainable Practices
In 2016, Venkatesan established Sustainable Practices,[14] [15] a 501(c)3 nonprofit with a mission "to facilitate a culture of sustainability as defined by reducing the human-made impact to the planet and its ecosystems" within Barnstable County, Massachusetts, and serves as the organization's executive director.[16] In 2019, Sustainable Practices initiated the Municipal Plastic Bottle Ban campaign. The organization followed with the Commercial Single-use Plastic Water Bottle Ban in 2020.[17] In 2023, Sustainable Practices initiated an additional campaign, Plastic Reduction. The initiative specifically targets and eliminates the retail use of single-use takeout plastic. [18][19] The Municipal Plastic Bottle Ban has been in effect in all 15 Cape Cod towns since 2021, the Commercial Single-use Plastic Water Bottle Ban and Plastic Reduction remain as ongoing campaigns. [20][21]
References
- "Dr. Madhavi Venkatesan". Bridgewater State University. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
- "Madhavi Venkatesan". Northeastern University.
- "Economics Professor Earns Fulbright". Bridgewater State University. 28 April 2022.
- "SDG8 – Sustainable Economic Growth and Decent Work for All". Northeastern University. 30 August 2019.
- "Dr. Madhavi Venkatesan named Editor in Chief". Northeastern University. April 2021.
- "What's the real cost of a bottle of soda (and everything else)?". Northeastern University. 19 February 2020.
- Hanes, Stephanie (10 July 2023). "Plastics have shaped nearly every aspect of society. Now what?". Christian Science Monitor.
- "Dr. Madhavi Venkatesan to present on economics and sustainability". Northeastern University. 17 September 2020.
- "On the Value of Work with Dr. Madhavi Venkatesan". Northeastern University. 28 January 2021.
- Winters, Joseph (20 October 2022). "The selective accounting behind the plastic industry's climate-friendly claims". Grist.
- "Jennie C. Stephens Highlights Intersectionality Within the Climate Crisis". Northeastern University. 16 November 2020.
- "SDG8 – Sustainable Economic Growth and Decent Work for All". Northeastern University. 30 August 2019.
- Nguyen, Janet (15 October 2022). "Is a growing middle class the real key to economic growth?". Marketplace.
- Koch, Michelle (26 November 2018). "Sustainable Practices". edible Cape Cod.
- "Madhavi Venkatesan MELP '16". Vermont Law School Loquitur. 14 June 2021.
- Legere, Christine (14 February 2020). "Activists turn attention to water bottle sales". Cape Cod Times.
- Fraser, Doug (1 July 2021). "'People want to make an impact': Organization wins municipal bottle bans in every Cape Cod town". Cape Cod Times.
- Abel, David (13 February 2023). "'A decade after Concord's landmark ban on bottled water, plastic pollution remains a scourge". Boston Globe.
- Annonen, Noelle (10 February 2023). "Student Asks Town Meeting To Ban More Plastic". Falmouth Enterprise.
- Hill, Jessica (13 September 2021). "'Greener alternative': Cape businesses support plastic water bottle ban, seek substitutes". Cape Cod Times.
- Wood, Tim (19 January 2022). "Single-Use Plastic Water Bottles Disappear From Shelves". Cape Cod Chronicle.