Mark Searle
Dallen Timothy
research interests: sense of community in recreational sports settings; positive youth development in youth sports; transformational leadership
research interests: international boundaries; tourism and geopolitics; heritage tourism and the politics of heritage; heritage foods; migration, diasporas and tourism; religious tourism and sacred spaces; and globalization processes
Executive Vice President, University Provost and Professor Ph.D., University of Maryland
bio: Prior to this current administrative appointment, Mark Searle served as Interim University Provost, Deputy Provost and Chief of Staff, and Vice-President for Academic Personnel. Earlier in his career at ASU, Searle served as the Founding Dean of the College of Human Services and as Vice President and Provost of ASU’s West campus. Searle joined ASU after an extensive career in Canada where he was the Founding Director of the multidisciplinary Health, Leisure, and Human Performance Research Institute and head of an academic program in Recreation Studies at the University of Manitoba. Prior to his university appointment, Searle served in various management positions within municipal and provincial government. He has been elected as a fellow of the Academy of Leisure Sciences and the Academy for Park and Recreation Administration. Searle is widely published on the relationship between leisure behaviour and the psychological well being of older adults.
Professor Ph.D., University of Waterloo
bio: Dallen J. Timothy joined the recreation management and tourism faculty at ASU in 2000, and since 2010 has served as a Senior Sustainability Scientist in ASU’s Global Institute of Sustainability. He is also a Visiting Professor at Beijing Union University, Indiana University, the American University of Rome, and the University of Girona, Spain. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Heritage Tourism and serves on the editorial boards of 17 national and international journals. projects: BLM Utah PFO Nine Mile Canyon Community Engagement Project, Marketing Profile and Economic Impact of Visitors to Wickenburg
Gordon Shockley
Christine Vogt
research interests: building the field of non-market entrepreneurship; public policy modeling; politics economics and sociology of the arts and humanities
research interests: destination marketing, community development with sustainability outcomes, park studies and outdoor recreation, consumer behavior
Associate Professor Ph.D., George Mason University
Professor Ph.D., Indiana University Bloomington
bio: Gordon Shockley joined ASU in 2011 as associate professor of social entrepreneurship. Previously, he worked in all levels of American government, including the finance division of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the budget offices of Milwaukee County, Kentucky, and Missouri. He also has managed multi-million dollar information technology projects simultaneously across several state and local governments. He is the lead editor of Non-market Entrepreneurship: Interdisciplinary Approaches.
bio: Christine Vogt returned to ASU after starting her academic career there in the 1990’s. She has conducted tourism and parks research at Michigan State University for the past 16 years and returned to ASU to direct the Center for Sustainable Tourism. The Center hosts faculty and student research, discovery and outreach in tourism and related fields, and sharpen tourism development and industry performance toward more sustainable thinking, planning, and outcomes.
projects: BLM Trail Cooperative Planning and Assessment
projects: BLM Utah PFO Nine Mile Canyon Community Engagement Project, Northstar 2025: Arizona BLM Futuring, Assessment of the Copper Corridor’s Tourism, Marketing Evaluation Study for the Grand Canyon Field Institute
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