Join Us for the Final New New South Lecture
Dr. Michael Walden has perhaps done the most serious thinking and writing on the planet about how North Carolina’s economy is a transforming under the pressures and opportunities of the Connected Age, as we compete on a global basis for capital, jobs and workers. He has, in fact, emerged as one of the rare economists who can talk in easy-to-understand terms about the forces that are changing the working lives of North Carolinians.
As a result, he has appeared on NBC, CBS, The Fox Report, and the Newshour With Jim Lehrer, and is frequently quoted in such newspapers as USA Today, The News and Observer, The Charlotte Observer, The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post.
Join us for the last of this year’s New New South lectures as Dr. Walden examines how tobacco, furniture, and traditional textiles have given way to technology, finance pharmaceuticals and other industries that prize a skilled, college-educated work force as their most important commodity.
The New New South series has been co-sponsored by the NCSU Libraries and the North Carolina Research Campus (NCRC) to give participants an opportunity to hear from leading scholars in North Carolina on both the move into the information economy and the previous economic shifts that have shaped the area. The series is open without charge to the general public, but will be of special interest to historians, scientists, economists, social scientists, archivists, students, and university faculty.
Communities in Transition
Dr. Michael Walden is a William Neal Reynolds Distinguished Professor and extension economist in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at North Carolina State. He will be referencing his book North Carolina in the Connected Age: Challenges and Opportunities in a Globalizing Economy
Assembly Room
D.H. Hill Library
April 15, 4 p.m.


