Professor, Department of Community Health and Health Behavior, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
Lynn Kozlowski was an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Wesleyan University from 1974 to 1979, when he moved to Canada. For 10 years he worked at the Addiction Research Foundation in Toronto, where he was a Senior Scientist and Head of their behavioral research program on tobacco use. He was also Professor of Preventive Medicine & Biostatistics and Professor of Psychology at the University of Toronto. In 1990, he moved to Penn State University where he was Professor and Head of Department of Biobehavioral Health in the College of Health and Human Development. Kozlowski has served on the Editorial Boards of Drug and Alcohol Dependence, Journal of Substance Abuse and Psychology of Addictive Behaviors. He is a Senior Editor of Addiction and an Associate Editor for Nicotine and Tobacco Research and for Tobacco Control. In 2006, he moved to the University at Buffalo, to start the Department of Health Behavior. In 2008 he was appointed to Dean of the School of Public Health and Health Professions and served in that role until June 2014.
Lynn Kozlowski is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association, the Society for Behavioral Medicine, the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research; Member of the American Public Health Association, the American Academy of Health Behavior, and the Society for Nicotine and Tobacco Research.
Why requiring low-nicotine cigarettes is still ill-advised
Oct 25, 2016 18:28 pm UTC| Health
Global policymakers will soon consider a policy of requiring that only reduced-nicotine cigarettes can be manufactured or sold. This may sound good, but as someone who has studied tobacco for decades, I believe it is...
Johannesburg in a time of darkness: Ivan Vladislavić’s new memoir reminds us of the city’s fragility
Economist Chris Richardson on an ‘ugly’ inflation result and the coming budget
Labour can afford to be far more ambitious with its economic policies – voters are on board
Sudan: civil war stretches into a second year with no end in sight