Lawrence S. Coben

Lawrence S. "Larry" Coben (born 1958) is an archaeologist who founded the Sustainable Preservation Initiative. He serves as Chairman of the Board of NRG Energy, the Fortune 200 integrated electricity company

Archaeology/cultural heritage career

Coben is a consulting scholar and archaeologist at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology and the founder and Executive Director of the Sustainable Preservation Initiative . His most recent work focuses on Inca imperial strategy and the archaeology of performance.[1] He directs a multidisciplinary archaeological project in the Canete Valley of Peru and was director of a project at the monumental site of Incallajta in Bolivia.[2] With Takeshi Inomata, he co-authored the book Archaeology of Performance: Theater, Power and Community. Richard Schechner described this work as "an important work integrating performance theory, forensics, and classical archaeology to describe and analyze not a "dead past" but pasts that continue to operate as rich repositories of living behaviors." [3][4] Coben has published articles on the Inca, archaeological site museums,[5] and the role of performance and spectacle in ancient society. Coben recently delivered a TED talk about alleviating poverty, empowering women and saving cultural heritage entitled "Build Futures, Save Pasts".

He also runs the aforementioned Sustainable Preservation Initiative ("SPI). SPI preserves the world's cultural heritage by providing sustainable economic opportunities to poor communities where endangered archaeological sites are located. SPI believes the best way to preserve cultural heritage is creating or supporting locally owned businesses whose success is tied to that preservation. SPI's grants provide a TWO for ONE benefit: they provide transformative economic opportunities for local residents while saving sites for future generations to study and enjoy. SPI's paradigm, designed by Coben, has been suggested by the Milken Institute as an optimal solution to preserve and develop Israel's cultural heritage[6][7]

Coben is an expert member of the ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Archaeological Heritage Management ("ICAHM"). He is Chairman of ICAHM's Nominations Assistance Committee and Vice Chairman of its Standards Board.[8] He was recently named to the jury of the prestigious Cotsen Prize in Archaeology[9]

Energy career

In addition to his academic work in archaeology, Coben has started and run numerous energy companies. He is Chairman of the Board of NRG Energy, the Fortune 200 integrated electricity supplier.[10] He is founder and CEO of Tremisis Energy Corporation and was CEO of Tremisis's two eponymous publicly traded affiliates. Coben serves on the Board of Freshpet,[11] and was an Advisory Partner of Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners. Coben was one of the founders of Catalyst Energy Corporation, one of the nation's first alternative energy companies. Catalyst was #1 on the Inc. Magazine Fastest Growing Public Company List for the years 1982-1986.[12] He served as chief executive officer of the New York Stock Exchange traded Bolivian Power Company, Ltd., Bolivia's largest private integrated electric generator and distributor. He was also a director of Prisma Energy and the Chilean utility SAESA, among other companies.

Coben is also an advisor to several politicians and groups on energy policy. Ambassador Dick Swett and he wrote the national energy policy for Senator Joseph Lieberman's 2004 presidential campaign. He is a member of the Department of Homeland Security's Sustainability and Efficiency Task Force[13] and Cleantech and Green Business for Obama.

Coben writes the Larry Coben energy policy and cultural heritage blog for the Huffington Post, and his own blog Energizing America, both of which discuss major energy policy and cultural heritage issues and comment on related news from around the globe.

Education

Coben holds a BA in Economics from Yale University, a JD from Harvard Law School, and a Ph.D in Anthropology (Archaeology) from the University of Pennsylvania.

Selected publications

  • Archaeology of Performance: Theater, Power and Community. Volume co-edited with Takeshi Inomata, published by Altamira Press (2006). Various personal contributions in this volume, including "Other Cuzcos: Replicated Theaters of Inka Power".
  • 'Archaeological Reconnaissance in the Carabaya Region, Peru. In Advances in the Archaeology of the Titicaca Basin. Charles Stanish, Amanda Cohen, and Mark Aldenderfer, eds. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press. With Charles Stanish (2005)
  • The Museums' Objects. In Site Museums in Latin America. Helaine Silverman ed. University of Florida Press (2006)
  • Incallajta, Performance Center of the Inkas: A Digital Reconstruction and Virtual Reality Analysis In From Space to Place: 2nd International Conference on Remote Sensing in Archaeology. Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop, CNR, Rome, Italy, December 4–7, 2006, S. Campana and M. Forte eds. With Paul John Boulifard
  • Some Roads Do Lead to Incallajta: The Double Road from Vacas. Ñawpa Pacha, Journal of Andean Studies, Volume 30, Number 1, pp. 53–64. (2010)
  • Barter markets in the Pre-Hispanic Andes.. In Redistribution and Markets in Andean South America, ed. K. Hirth & J. Pillsbury, pp. 421–436. Dumbarton Oaks with C. Stanish (2012)
  • Theaters of Power: Inca Imperial Performance. Doctoral Dissertation, ProQuest (2012).
  • If all the world's a stage then what's an usnu?. In Inca Sacred Space: Landscape, Site and Symbol in the Andes Meddens, F., Willis, K., McEwan, C. and Branch, N. (eds), London: Archetype Publications (2014).
  • Sustainable Preservation: Creating Entrepreneurs, Opportunities and Measurable Results. In Archaeology and Economic Development, edited by P. Gould and P. Burtenshaw, Public Archaeology pp. 278–287 (2014)
  • Sostenibilidad y Preservación del Patriomonio Cultural: Nuevos Paradigmas, Nuevos Casos de Estudio. In El Patrimonio Cultural de America, Tomo II, Conservación y Uso Social. A Soberón Mora, M Rivera and M. Scatamacchia eds., pp. 103–117 (2014). With S. Cusicanqui Marsano
  • Caminos Rituales, Caminos Utiles: El Sistema Vial en la Región de Pocona, Bolivia. In Proceedings of the Qhapaq Ñan Conference, L. Arkush and G. Marcone eds, (in press). With M. Muñoz
  • Sustainability and Cultural Heritage. In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology. C. Smith (ed) pp. 1521–1522 Springer (2014)
  • Ushnu. In Encyclopedia of the Incas, G. Urton and A. Von Hagen (eds). Rowman and Littlefield (in press)
  • The Inca enter of Incallajta in the Southeastern Andes. In Oxford Handbook of the Incas, A. Covey and S. Alconinin (eds), Oxford University Press (in press)

References

  1. Inomata,Takeshi and Coben, Lawrence (2006). Archaeology of Performance:Theaters of Power, Community and Politics. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press. ISBN 978-0-7591-0876-9.
  2. Coben, Lawrence (2010). "Some Roads Do Lead to Incallajta: The Double Road from Vacas". Ñawpa Pacha. 30: 53–64.
  3. Schechner, Richard (Summer 2007). "Review of Archaeology of Performance". TDR. 51 (2): 197.
  4. Undereiner, Tamara (June 2007). "Inomata and Coben's Archaeology of Performance: Theaters of Power, Community, and Politics". E-misferica. 4.1.
  5. The Museums Object(ive)s. In Silverman, Helaine (2006). Site Museums in Latin America. University of Florida Press. pp. 249–255. ISBN 0-8130-3001-3.
  6. "Milken Release on Israeli Cultural Heritage".
  7. Milken Institute. "Cultural Heritage as an Economic Development Resource in Israel,". Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  8. "Coben ICAHM Bio". Archived from the original on 2013-08-04.
  9. "Cotsen Prize Jury". Archived from the original on 2012-10-22.
  10. "NRG Board of Directors".
  11. "Freshpet Board of Directors".
  12. "1987 Inc. Magazine 100".
  13. "DHS Sustainability and Efficiency Task Force Members".
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