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Professor Thomas W. Hazlett

Thomas Hazlett holds the H.H. Macaulay Endowed Chair in Economics at Clemson,
conducting research in the field of Law and Economics and specializing in the Information Economy, including the analysis of
markets and regulation in telecommunications, media, and the Internet. Prof. Hazlett served as Chief Economist of the Federal
Communications Commission, and has held faculty positions at the University of Californis, Davis, Columbia University,
the Wharton School, and George Mason University School of Law. His research has appeared in such academic publications as
the Journal of Law & Economics, the Journal of Legal Studies, the Journal of Financial Economics and the Rand Journal of
Economics, and he has published articles in the Univ. of Pennsylvania Law Review, the Yale Journal on Regulation, the
Columbia Law Review, and the Berkeley Technology Law Journal. He also writes for popular periodicals including the Wall
Street Journal, New York Times, Reason, The New Republic, The Economist, Slate, and the Financial Times, where he was a
columnist on technology policy issues, 2002-2011. Prof. Hazlett also serves as Director of the Information Economy Project at
Clemson University. He has provided expert testimony to federal and state courts, regulatory agencies, committees of Congress,
foreign governments, and international organizations. His book, Public Policy Toward Cable Television, was co-authored with Matthew L. Spitzer
(MIT Press, 1997).
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