By Katrina Dix
51情报站 Professor Emeritus Wayne Talley, Ph.D., an Eminent Scholar of Economics who won the 2018 International Onassis Prize in Shipping 鈥 sometimes described as the Nobel Prize for maritime economics research 鈥 died on Jan. 29. He was 82.
鈥淲e all benefited from Wayne's true dedication to academic excellence and his thought leadership,鈥 said Erika Marsillac, Ph.D., interim dean of the Strome College of Business, where Dr. Talley made his professional home. 鈥淗e leaves an indelible mark at Strome, at 51情报站, and in his field. His legacy and advocacy for maritime economics research, while started at 51情报站, extends around the globe.鈥
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ManWo Ng, Ph.D., a frequent collaborator of Dr. Talley鈥檚 after the latter served on the search committee for the transportation engineering position that brought Dr. Ng to 51情报站 in 2011, said, 鈥淗is contributions to the college and university were uncountable during his 50-year tenure at 51情报站. He will be missed.鈥
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Dr. Ng and Dr. Talley together founded 鈥淢aritime Transport Research,鈥 the first analytical research academic transport journal, published by Elsevier.
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When Dr. Talley helped found the University鈥檚 program in maritime and supply chain management in 2012, it was the second of its kind in the United States 鈥 but a natural step for Dr. Talley, who had already been with 51情报站 for 40 years.
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He joined the University in 1972 to teach a transportation course, part of a new 12-credit graduate certificate in maritime management, because he had worked part-time at two trucking companies as an undergraduate studying economics at the University of Richmond, he said in an interview in 2022, when he retired.
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鈥淲ell, I know something about transportation. Not very much about passenger, but freight, you know. I could hang in there, so to speak,鈥 Dr. Talley said he thought.
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In 1984, he helped found 51情报站鈥檚 Maritime Trade and Transport Research Group. Dr. Ng credits Dr. Talley as one of the first people to recognize the value of maritime research for the Hampton Roads region, and a source of global recognition for the university.
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Will Fediw, 51情报站 alum 鈥08 and now Senior Vice President for the Virginia Maritime Association, was one of Dr. Talley鈥檚 students.
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鈥淒r. Talley was one of the first people I met when I started the Maritime Supply Chain Management program,鈥 Fediw said. 鈥淲hile an internationally-acclaimed academic in the maritime industry, he was very open to the students and was active in our fledgling community.鈥
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Among Dr. Talley鈥檚 global appointments were lifetime honorary chair professor for the Institute of Traffic and Transportation at National Chiao Tung University in Taipei, Taiwan; lifetime honorary guest professor at Shanghai (China) Maritime University; honorary visiting professor at Costas Grammenos International Centre for Shipping, Trade and Finance for the Cass Business School at City University, London; honorary guest professor of maritime and transportation at Ningbo (China) University; and member of the Board of Advice for the Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies at University of Sydney, Australia.
鈥淗e routinely spoke at universities around the globe and numerous visiting scholars joined him at 51情报站 over the years to work with him and study under his guidance,鈥 said Sara Russell Riggs, M.B.A, a senior lecturer with the School of Supply Chain, Logistics, and Maritime Operations, which opened last fall.
Russell Riggs first studied under Dr. Talley as a Strome graduate student, then worked with him as a colleague to lay the groundwork for the school鈥檚 opening.
鈥淒r. Talley taught us the extreme value of the Hampton Roads maritime and shipping community and its role as part of the global economy and supply chains,鈥 Russell Riggs said. 鈥淗e cared deeply about his students, encouraging them, sharing stories and always a laugh. He will truly be missed by so many Monarchs.鈥