Daniels College of Business
DU is the oldest independent university in the Rocky Mountain region and is classified as an R1 Doctoral/Research University. U.S. News and Times Higher Education have consistently ranked DU among the nation's top 100 universities, while Princeton Review named DU as the university most loved by its students.
The Daniels College of Business is one of the largest colleges within the University, offering a variety of majors and minors, including nine bachelor's degrees, four MBA degree programs, seven specialized master's programs and an Executive PhD program. Daniels was founded in 1908-the eighth-oldest collegiate business program in the United States. It has held AACSB accreditation since 1923. U.S. News & World Report, Bloomberg Businessweek, Financial Times, Forbes, and Poets & Quants routinely recognize Daniels programs as among the best in the country. We transform lives, organizations, and communities through educational experiences, outreach, and knowledge creation.
The City of Denver is home to more than 40,000 businesses and is a fertile environment for entrepreneurs and startups. It has abundant sunshine, one of the country's largest city park systems, an impressive craft beer scene, and ample access to outdoor activities. All of it is easily accessible from the DU campus. With over 300 days of sunshine a year, the nation's largest city park system, and a thriving business community, a Pew Research Study lists Denver as the #1 city in which people want to live.
Franklin L. Burns School of Real Estate and Construction Management
The Burns School of Real Estate and Construction Management is founded on the full life cycle of the built environment. Students are prepared to fill an increasingly important role as an integrated project leader and acquire a cohesive understanding of the built environment in addition to the specific educational discipline of their choice. The foundation of the Burns School is the integration of academic and scholarly real estate and construction management knowledge with issues of real-world application. The Burns School of Real Estate and Construction Management offers a Master of Science in Real Estate and the Built Environment (REBE) and an undergraduate major in Real Estate and Construction Management in the Colleges Bachelor of Science in Business Administration program, as well as minors with concentrations in Real Estate Finance and Investments, Real Estate Development and Construction Management. The Burns School offers rigorous academic instruction, enjoys strong industry support, and has eight full-time faculty members. The Burns School is recognized as an innovative leader in Real Estate and Construction Management. In the @context of housing access and affordability, the School is working across the University of Denver to identify ambitious, yet pragmatic solutions to today's most pressing housing challenges, supported by rigorous, action-oriented research.
Position Summary
The Housing Economist will be housed within the Burns School of Real Estate and Construction Management, but will be working in partnership with other institutions and other units of the University of Denver, including the Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute at the Sturm College of Law, the Scrivner Institute of Public Policy, and the Graduation School of Social Work, to support the launch and growth of a new Housing Research Center and to advance an interdisciplinary research agenda designed to address barriers to housing access.
The Housing Economist to be hired as a Research Faculty (non-tenure track) and will lead and publish research focused on housing and housing policy. The research will include topics related to expanding the supply and affordability of housing through land use and zoning policies, innovative financing tools, and other policy interventions. The Housing Economist will collaborate closely with leaders and scholars from other units on campus, as well as researchers from other institutions, to identify new research opportunities, develop research design and conceptual frameworks for understanding the links between policies and housing supply, and produce evidence-driven research that can help to inform housing policy debates in Colorado and at the federal level. The Housing Economist will also be responsible for working closely with researchers from Terner Labs to develop and manage Housing Policy Simulators for Colorado and to use resulting models to conduct policy-relevant research and analyze the application of research to policy outcomes. The Housing Economist will be expected to represent DU at various forums, conferences, symposiums and events to present and share the research and white papers produced. Working under the supervision of the Director of the Burns School and in partnership with the RMLUI, a Law and Policy Research Fellow ("Fellow"), data analysts and others, the Housing Economist will be expected to undertake rigorous, timely, and practical research projects that focus in the areas of Housing Economics, Real Estate Finance, the impact of Immigration and Demographics on Local Economies, and the interaction between Local Markets and Housing affordability.
This position is grant funded. The term of the appointment and continuation is contingent on available funding.
Essential Functions
Research: The Housing Economist will be expected to publish research in the field of housing policy and real estate markets. This research will include the development and application of Terner Labs' Housing Policy Simulator for communities in Colorado. The Housing Economist will have an opportunity to collaborate with scholarly active faculty across various departments and schools on research papers targeted at top tier housing, real estate, and economics journals.
Collaboration: The Housing Economist will be expected to partner with researchers at the University of Denver, Terner Labs, and other institutions to support interdisciplinary housing research projects, integrating policy analysis with economic and demographic data, spatial analyses, industry reports, and other sources of information. The Housing Economist will also support communications and outreach that foster broader engagement with DU's housing work.
Engagement: The Housing Economist would be expected to participate in events sponsored by the RMLUI, Franklin L. Burns School of Real Estate and Construction Management, and the Scrivner Institute for Public Policy, share their research in writing and through presentations, contribute to the intellectual life of the University of Denver, and advance beneficial policy solutions in collaboration with other interested stakeholders.
Secondary Functions
Industry Presentations: The Housing Economist will become a subject matter expert and be prepared to present to large and small audiences.
Teaching: The faculty will have opportunities to guest lecture in various programs across campus. Additionally, there will be opportunities to teach in the Executive Certificate in Affordable Housing, the Burns School of Real Estate and other units at DU at extra compensation at the DU adjunct rates.
Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities:
Willingness to focus on Colorado's housing market and develop as a subject matter expert.
Ability to write and present for a wide variety of audiences, ranging from local economic and real estate professionals to industry leaders and government officials.
Experience with economic forecasting.
High standard of excellence and research integrity; outstanding judgement dependability and professionalism.
Able to perform independently and as part of a multidisciplinary collaborative team.
Ability to mentor and supervise direct reports
Ability to manage multiple simultaneous projects and deadlines.
Strong organizational and project management