Phillip Clay

Phillip L. Clay (born May 17, 1946) is a professor of housing policy and city planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as well as chair of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. He is the former Chancellor of the Institute.[1] While Chancellor, Professor Clay had oversight responsibility for graduate and undergraduate education at MIT, including cost-cutting decision-making,[2] as well as student life, student services, international initiatives, and the management of certain of MIT’s large-scale institutional partnerships.[3] He was also the highest ranking Black administrator in the Institute's 150-year history.[4]

Phillip Clay
4th Chancellor of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
In office
2001–2010
PresidentCharles M. Vest
Susan Hockfield
Preceded byLawrence Bacow
Succeeded byEric Grimson
Personal details
Born (1946-05-17) May 17, 1946
Wilmington, North Carolina
ResidenceBoston, Massachusetts
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
ThesisThe process of black suburban migration: The 1960–1970 experience (1975)
Academic work
DisciplineUrban planning
InstitutionsMassachusetts Institute of Technology

A member of the MIT faculty since 1975, Professor Clay served as Associate Provost in the Office of the Provost from 1994 to 2001. He was the Head of the Department of Urban Studies and Planning from 1992 to 1994 and its Associate Department Head during 1990 to 1992. From 1980 to 1984, Professor Clay served as the Assistant Director of the Joint Center for Urban Studies of MIT and Harvard.[5] He became Chancellor in 2001.[3]

It was Clay, in 2007, who investigated claims that MIT's popular admissions dean Marilee Jones had falsified her credentials, when applying for the job. When those claims were verified, Clay asked for her resignation.[6]

Clay is known for his work in U.S. housing policy and community-based development. In a 1987 study commissioned by the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation, Clay identified the market and institutional conditions contributing to the erosion of low-income rental housing and documented the need for a national preservation policy. He later served on the national commission that recommended the policy that became part of the Housing Act of 1990.

Clay is a founding member of the National Housing Trust that addresses the issue of housing preservation.[7] He is also President of the Board of The Community Builders, Inc., the nation’s largest nonprofit developer of affordable housing.[8] He serves as member and Vice Chair of the MasterCard Foundation board and recently he was appointed to the Board of Trustees of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[9] He was appointed to the board of The Kresge Foundation in 2008.[10]

Clay is a native of Wilmington North Carolina. He received the AB degree with Honors from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1968 and his Ph.D. in City Planning in 1975 from MIT.[11] He resides in Boston with his wife, Cassandra.[12]

On November 2, 2010, Clay announced he would step down as Chancellor.[13] He was succeeded by Eric Grimson.[14]

Publications

  • Neighborhood Renewal: Middle-class Resettlement and Incumbent Upgrading in American Neighborhoods
  • Neighborhood Politics and Planning (with Rob Hollister)
gollark: Wikipedia fits into 15GB (minus user pages etc) and it uses horrible inefficient XML.
gollark: If you drop the images and HTML formatting and whatever else most ebooks contain, and do compression better than ZIP does, you could probably reach some *ridiculous* compression ratios.
gollark: An average ebook is something like 1MB and that's for 100000 words + cover image.
gollark: If it's *anything* but "basically 100% of the day" you need batteries.
gollark: "1/3 of the day, when it isn't cloudy" is not most of the time.

References

  1. "Jet - Google Books". Jet. 2001-07-09. Retrieved 2013-10-03 via Google Books.
  2. Finnegan, Leah (2010-02-27). "MIT: Dorm, Shuttle Cutbacks". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  3. Brayboy, Duane (February 22, 2005). "Black Movers and Shakers: Phillip Clay". Black Informant (blog). Archived from the original on July 8, 2011. Retrieved March 8, 2010.
  4. "Phillip Clay named next MIT chancellor". MIT News Office. 2001-06-06. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  5. "MIT admissions dean resigns over fake resume". USA Today. 2007-04-27. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  6. "National Housing Trust Board of Directors". Nhtinc.org. Archived from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  7. "This site is temporarily unavailable". Chinaplanningnetwork.org. Archived from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  8. "Membership list - Board of Trustees". Unc.edu. Archived from the original on 2013-09-28. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  9. Capos, Claudia (July 3, 2008). "MIT's Chancellor, Phillip L. Clay, Joins The Kresge Foundation Board of Trustees". Kresge Foundation. Archived from the original on January 6, 2011. Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  10. Clay, Phillip Leroy (1975). The process of black suburban migration: The 1960–1970 experience (Ph.D.). Massachusetts Institute of Technology via ProQuest.
  11. Hayden, Robert C. "The HistoryMakers Video Oral History Interview with Phillip L. Clay". The HistoryMakers. Archived from the original on June 17, 2011.
  12. "Chancellor Phillip L. Clay to step down". MIT News Office. 2010-11-02. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  13. "W. Eric L. Grimson, Chancellor - Massachusetts Institute of Technology". Web.mit.edu. Archived from the original on 2014-01-22. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
Academic offices
Preceded by
Lawrence Bacow
Chancellor of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2001 – 2010
Succeeded by
Eric Grimson
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