Vera Micheles Dean

Vera Micheles Dean (March 29, 1903 – October 10, 1972) was a Russian American political scientist. She was the head of research for the Foreign Policy Association, one of the leading think tanks of the 1940s and 1950s, where she became one of the leading authorities in international affairs during that period.[1]

Early life and schooling

Born in St. Petersburg, Russia, her parents were both intellectuals.[2] She was studied in the classics, and learned seven foreign languages including English, German and French.[3] Her parents fled Russia after the White Revolution of 1917 and first moved to London, then to Boston.[2] Dean enrolled at Radcliffe College, and after graduating in 1925, she won a Carnegie Endowment fellowship to Yale University where she earned a M.A in international law. She came back to Radcliffe for her Ph.D. and was soon hired by the Foreign Policy Association. She married a New York City attorney, William Johnson Dean and had two children. After the sudden death of her husband in 1936, to support her children she decided to dedicate more time with the Association.[2]

Career

Foreign Policy Association

Dean was first hired as a research staff at the Foreign Policy Association.[3] After ten years, Dean was promoted as the director of research[3] and the main editor of the Association newspaper Foreign Policy Bulletin where she became a leading advocate of a collective security approach to American politics. Here she authored many Foreign Policy Reports, including those entitled “North Atlantic Defense Pact”, “Russia’s Foreign Economic Policy” and “Economic Trends in Eastern Europe”.[3]

Foreign Politics

Dean was appointed by Governor Herbert H. Lehman as his adviser for the first American delegation to the United Nations and later as a consultant for The San Francisco Conference.[2][3] In 1949, General Lucius D. Clay arranged for Dean to travel throughout Europe, visiting Frankfurt, Berlin, Prague, Warsaw and London.[3] In each country, officials of the United States Department of State, United States Army and the Economic Cooperation Administration organized for Dean to interview of representatives and country officials.[3]

Dean's book titles include "Europe in Retreat," "The Four Cornerstones of Peace" and "Russia: Menace or Promise?".[3] She focused particularly on United States - Soviet Union relations, writing an influential book "The United States and Russia" in 1946, becoming one of the first experts to decry the Cold War.[2] She was awarded the Jane Addams Medal for Distinguished Service presented by Rockford College in 1954 and the French Legion of Honor.[1]

Academia

Dean taught at Harvard University, Barnard College, University of Rochester, and lectured at the University of Paris on American Foreign Policy[3] before settling down at New York University Graduate School of Public Administration. There she became a tenured professor and a senior fellow in the Center for International Studies before retiring in 1971.[1]

Death

She suffered multiple strokes before dying of a heart attack in 1972. At the time she was in the middle of writing her autobiography.[2] After her death, Dean's personal papers, including her autobiography, was given to the Radcliffe College and are held in Harvard University library archives.[4]

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References

  1. "Vera Micheles Dean, 69, dies, International-Affairs Specialist". New York Times. Associated Press. October 12, 1972. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  2. Sicherman, Barbara; Green, Carol Hurd; Milligan, Roberta (1980). Notable American Women: The Modern Period : a Biographical Dictionary. 4. Boston: Harvard University Press. pp. 182–183.
  3. "Summary of Vera Micheles Dean's Work, Written for the Inter Club Council of Business and Professional Women's Clubs of Toronto and District" [Textual record]. Elizabeth Long, Series: 4 Biographies of Women, File: Dean, Vera Micheles, ID: File 160. Waterloo, ON: Doris Lewis Rare Book Room Special Collections & Archives, University of Waterloo.
  4. "Dean, Vera Micheles, 1903-1972. Papers, 1929-1973: A Finding Aid". Harvard University Library. July 1983. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
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