Committee on Degrees in Social Studies
At Harvard University the Committee on Degrees in Social Studies is the committee that runs the honors-only, interdisciplinary concentration in social science subjects for undergraduate students. Founded in 1960, it reflects the belief that the study of the social world requires an integration of the disciplines of history, political science, sociology, economics, anthropology, and philosophy. All students are required to complete a senior thesis.[1]
Founders
- Stanley Hoffmann, an authority on international relations;
- Alexander Gerschenkron, an eminent economic historian;
- H. Stuart Hughes, a specialist in European intellectual history;
- Barrington Moore Jr., a political sociologist writing about Soviet society and revolutions;
- Robert Paul Wolff, a student of political and social theory, who became head tutor for the first year of the program[2]
Chairs
- David S. Landes 1981-1993
- Charles Maier 1993-1997
- Seyla Benhabib 1997-2001
- Grzegorz Ekiert 2001-2006
- Richard Tuck 2006-
Notable alumni
- Chuck Schumer, senior U.S. Senator from New York and current Senate Minority Leader, 1971
- E.J. Dionne, Washington Post columnist, 1973
- Ajit Pai, Chairman of the FCC, 1994
- Tom Morello, musician (Rage Against the Machine, The Nightwatchman, and Audioslave), 1986
- Merrick B. Garland, judge for the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (and Obama Supreme Court Associate nominee), 1974
- Mickey Kaus, journalist, blogger, and 2010 Senate candidate, 1973[3]
- Michael Kremer, developmental economist, winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics, 1985
- Mark Whitaker, former Editor of Newsweek, 1979[4]
- Adam Cohen, journalist and author, 1984
- Dean Norris, actor, 1985
- Joshua Redman, jazz musician, 1986[5]
- Ben Mezrich, author, 1991[6]
- Lucy H. Koh, federal judge, 1990
- Charles Sabel, MacArthur Fellow and noted political economist at Columbia University
- Jason Furman, Chairman of President Barack Obama's Council of Economic Advisors (CEA)
- Emily Chang, the anchor and executive producer of Bloomberg Technology, 2002[7][8]
Footnotes
- Social Studies Archived 2007-10-14 at Archive.today
- Origins and Early Years
- http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1998/6/2/from-marxist-to-welfare-reformer-pmickey/
- http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2004/6/9/crimson-colleagues-reunite-at-newsweek-magazine/
- http://www.joshuaredman.com/bio.php
- "Emily Chang". goodreads.com. Retrieved April 22, 2019.
- "Emily Chang". theartof.com. Retrieved April 22, 2019.
gollark: The lack of pagination is a little ridiculous.
gollark: Ah, of course.
gollark: An AI created by superintelligent fishes to interact with human society, *obviously*.
gollark: Perhaps Fish is actually a highly advanced AI, far more advanced than any other previous human invention, designed to click eggs on DragCave very fast.
gollark: You would probably have been beaten by fish-y people, who can seek and click golds in 0.001 seconds.
External links
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