The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Anthology
   

 

The Editors

 

Stephen L. Isaacs, J.D., is the president of the Center for Health and Social Policy in San Francisco, California. A former professor of public health at Columbia University and founding director of its Development Law and Policy Program, he has written extensively for professional and popular audiences. His book The Consumer's Legal Guide to Today's Health Care was reviewed as "the single best guide to the health care system in print today"; his articles have been widely syndicated and have appeared in law reviews and health policy journals. He also provides technical assistance internationally on health law, civil society, and social policy. A graduate of Columbia Law School and Brown University, Mr. Isaacs served as vice president of International Planned Parenthood's Latin American division, practiced health law, and spent four years in Thailand as a program officer for the U.S. Agency for International Development. He has served on many boards, including the Advisory Council of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the Advisory Board of Women's Rights Project of Human Rights Watch, and the board of trustees of the Royce mutual funds.

James R. Knickman, Ph.D., is vice president for research and evaluation at The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. He oversees a range of grants and national programs supporting research and policy analysis to better understand forces that can improve health status and the delivery of health care. In addition, he is in charge of developing formal evaluations of national programs supported by the Foundation. He also has played a leadership role in developing grant-making strategy in the area of chronic illness during his seven years at the Foundation. During the 1999-2000 academic year, he held a Regents' Lectureship at the University of California, Berkeley. Previously, Dr. Knickman was on the faculty of the Robert Wagner Graduate School of Public Service at New York University. At NYU, he was the founding director of a university-wide research center focused on urban health care. His publications include research on a range of health care topics, with particular emphasis on issues related to the financing and delivery of long-term care. He has served on a range of health-related advisory committees at the state and local levels, and he spent one year working at New York City's Office of Management and Budget. Currently, he serves on the board of trustees of Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital and chairs the board's committee overseeing construction of a new children's hospital in New Brunswick. He received his doctorate in public policy analysis from the University of Pennsylvania and completed undergraduate work at Fordham University.


 

 

 




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