Lisa Anderson
Dean,
School of International
and Public Affairs, Columbia University
Lisa Anderson is the sixth Dean to lead the School of International
and Public Affairs, established in 1946. She has been on the
faculty of Columbia since 1986 and, just prior to her appointment
as Dean, served as Chair of the Political Science Department
at Columbia. Dean Anderson also served as Director of Columbia's
Middle East Institute from 1990 to 1993.
One of this country's most eminent scholars of the Middle
East and North Africa, Dean Anderson's academic specialty is
state formation and regime change. Author of Pursuing Truth,
Exercising Power: Social Science and Public Policy in the Twenty-first
Century (Columbia University Press, 2003), The State
and Social Transformation in Tunisia and Libya, 1830-1980 (Princeton
University Press, 1986), editor of Transitions to Democracy (Columbia
University Press, 1999), and co-editor of The Origins of
Arab Nationalism (Columbia University Press, 1991), she
has written more than 35 scholarly articles. She has testified
before the Foreign Relations Committees of both the House and
the Senate, published commentary in the New York Times ,
the Washington
Post, and the Los Angeles Times , and appeared
as an expert on the news programs of the major television and
radio networks.
Dean Anderson holds a BA from Sarah Lawrence College and a
Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy from the Fletcher School
at Tufts University. She earned a PhD in Political Science
from Columbia University, where she also received a Certificate
from the Middle East Institute. She was awarded an Honorary
Doctor of Laws from Monmouth University in 2002. From 1981
to 1986, she was an Assistant Professor of Government and Social
Studies at Harvard University.
In addition to her responsibilities at Columbia, Dean Anderson
is President of the Middle East Studies Association, and Chair
of the Board of Directors of the Social Science Research Council.
She is on the Boards of the Carnegie Council on Ethics and
International Affairs, and Human Rights Watch, where she serves
as Co-chair of Human Rights Watch/Middle East. She is also
a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and the editorial
committee of Comparative Politics.
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