Allenby
Braden Allenby
- Professor
- Civil Engineering
- Bio
- Expertise
- Education
- Honors & Distinctions
- Selected Publications
Braden R. Allenby is currently Lincoln Professor of Engineering and Ethics, and Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and of Law, at Arizona State University, having moved from his previous position as the Environment, Health and Safety Vice President for AT&T in 2004. He is also a Batten Fellow in Residence at the University of Virginias Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, and a Fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts, Manufactures & Commerce. Dr. Allenby received his BA from Yale University in 1972, his J. D. from the University of Virginia Law School in 1978, his Masters in Economics from the University of Virginia in 1979, his Masters in Environmental Sciences from Rutgers University in the Spring of 1989, and his Ph.D. in Environmental Sciences from Rutgers in 1992.
Earth Systems Engineering and Management Industrial Ecology Science and Technology Policy
Rutgers University 1992
University of Virginia 1978
Yale University 1972
Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce
Outstanding Service Award from the Industry Cooperative for Ozone Layer Protection, 1990
Outstanding Leadership Award for Design for Environment Task Force, American Electronics Association, 1994
National Association for Environmental Management Environmental Excellence Award, 1995
Electronic Industries Alliance Individual Award for Environmental Progress, 1999
Batten Fellow in Residence at the University of Virginia Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, 2001
Templeton Fellow, 2007-2008
AT&T Industrial Ecology Fellow, 2008-2009
Arizona Professor of the Year, 2008 (Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching)
AAAS Fellow (elected 2008)
D. T. Allen, C. F. Murphy, B. R. Allenby, and C. I. Davidson, “Incorporating Sustainability into Chemical Engineering Education,” Chemical Engineering Progress, January 2009 105(1):47-53.
B. R. Allenby, “Industrial Ecology,” in Encyclopedia of Environmental Ethics and Philosophy, J. B. Callicott and R. Frodeman, eds., MacMillan Reference, New York, NY, 2009, pp. 517-518.
B. R. Allenby and D. Rejeski, “The Industrial Ecology of Emerging Technologies,” Journal of Industrial Ecology 12(3):267-269.
B. R. Allenby, “The Anthropocene as Media: Information Systems and the Creation of the Human Earth,” American Behavioral Scientist 52(1)107-140 (September, 2008).
E. Williams, R. Kahhat, B. Allenby, E. Kavazanjian, J. Kim and M. Xu, “Environmental, Social and Economic Implications of Global Reuse and Recycling of Personal Computers”, Environmental Science & Technology 42(17), 6446-6454 (2008).
R. Kahhat, J. Kim, M. Xu, B. Allenby, E. Williams and P. Zhang, “Exploring e-waste Management Systems in the United States,” Resources, Conservation and Recycling 52:955-964.
B. R. Allenby, “Earth Systems Engineering and Management: A Manifesto,” Environmental Science & Technology 41(23):7960-7965 (December 1, 2007).

