News
HMS Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.
News
Cambridge Police Respond to Three Armed Robberies Over Holiday Weekend
News
What’s Next for Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery Initiative?
News
MassDOT Adds Unpopular Train Layover to Allston I-90 Project in Sudden Reversal
News
Denied Winter Campus Housing, International Students Scramble to Find Alternative Options
In a move which promises to boost Harvard's international relations offerings, a UCLA political science professor has accepted a tenured faculty position in the government department.
Jeffry Alan Frieden, who will arrive at the University next fall, is an expert in political economy. He has written extensively on the Latin American debt crisis and international monetary relations.
"His work is on some of the most frontier topics in international relations," Gurney Professor of Political Science Robert D. Putnam said yesterday. "He is a very attractive person. He has been sought after by many other major universities."
Harvard has been wooing Frieden, 40, for several years, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Jeremy R. Knowles said in a speech to a gathering of more than 630 alumni Friday night.
The formal offer was made June 22, Frieden said in an interview this weekend. He accepted the position Friday.
Frieden's appointment could not have come at a better time given that former Dillon Professor of International Affairs Joseph S. Nye resigned last month to take a defense job in Washington, Putnam said.
"I don't want this to sound as if it's a fill-in for Joe," Putnam said, "but it will help us hold down the fort until Joe gets back."
Frieden, who was a visiting professor at Harvard in the fall of 1992, has taught a large course on international relations at UCLA, Pharr said.
That would seem to make him a natural for teaching Historical Study A-12, "International Relations in the Modern World," a course which has "In as much as it were a straight international relations or foreign policy course, it would be a little way away from what I've been doing over the past few years, but I would certainly be interested," Frieden said of the possibility of teaching a course like A-12. Frieden's arrival could give a boost to the study of international relations at Harvard. Although Nye and a few other faculty members proposed a concentration in the subject a few years ago, the suggestion was tabled indefinitely, Putnam said. "When there was discussion of that by a faculty-wide committee two or three years ago, their main conclusion was that we couldn't even begin to contemplate an international relations major until we got more faculty in that area," Putnam said. Over the past few years, however, the government department has acquired some "dynamite junior faculty" in the area, according to Putnam. Pharr said Frieden is known not only for his research but also for his teaching. "He is an extremely popular undergraduate teacher as well as an outstanding graduate teacher," Pharr said. "The most important thing that I can do is not fill the heads of undergraduates with facts but give them tools to analyze the world," Frieden said. When Frieden was a visiting professor at Harvard, he made valuable contributions not only to his students,' but to his colleagues' work, Putnam said. "I know he came here expecting to get a lot of his own writing done, but he didn't get as much as he expected to because he ended up reading a lot of other papers by people here," Putnam said. "Our work was certainly the better for it." Frieden received his bachelor's degree in 1979 and a Ph.D from Columbia University. He has been teaching at UCLA since 1983. His books include Banking on the World and Debt, Development and Democracy. A New York native, Frieden said he is happy to be returning to this part of the country. "I have a personal geographical preference for the urban Northeast," he said
"In as much as it were a straight international relations or foreign policy course, it would be a little way away from what I've been doing over the past few years, but I would certainly be interested," Frieden said of the possibility of teaching a course like A-12.
Frieden's arrival could give a boost to the study of international relations at Harvard.
Although Nye and a few other faculty members proposed a concentration in the subject a few years ago, the suggestion was tabled indefinitely, Putnam said.
"When there was discussion of that by a faculty-wide committee two or three years ago, their main conclusion was that we couldn't even begin to contemplate an international relations major until we got more faculty in that area," Putnam said.
Over the past few years, however, the government department has acquired some "dynamite junior faculty" in the area, according to Putnam.
Pharr said Frieden is known not only for his research but also for his teaching.
"He is an extremely popular undergraduate teacher as well as an outstanding graduate teacher," Pharr said.
"The most important thing that I can do is not fill the heads of undergraduates with facts but give them tools to analyze the world," Frieden said.
When Frieden was a visiting professor at Harvard, he made valuable contributions not only to his students,' but to his colleagues' work, Putnam said.
"I know he came here expecting to get a lot of his own writing done, but he didn't get as much as he expected to because he ended up reading a lot of other papers by people here," Putnam said. "Our work was certainly the better for it."
Frieden received his bachelor's degree in 1979 and a Ph.D from Columbia University. He has been teaching at UCLA since 1983.
His books include Banking on the World and Debt, Development and Democracy.
A New York native, Frieden said he is happy to be returning to this part of the country.
"I have a personal geographical preference for the urban Northeast," he said
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.