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>> The School and Its Faculty >>
Dean Mitchel B. Wallerstein

Mitchel
Wallerstein G’72 became the
eighth dean of the
Maxwell School of Citizenship and
Public Affairs in July
2003. He holds a tenured appointment as a professor in the
Departments of Political Science and Public Administration.
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Contact |
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Call Kathy Ciciarelli at
(315) 443-3461. E-mail:
mwallers@maxwell.syr.edu
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Links |
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>>
Curriculum
vitae (.doc)
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On
April 14, 2008, Dean Wallerstein made the State of
the School Address to the Maxwell community as he approaches his fifth year as Dean of the School.
>>
read the State of the School Address.
(.pdf)
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On
October 19, 2007, Dean Wallerstein spoke at the 10th
anniversary celebration of the KDI School of Public
Policy and Management in Seoul, Korea. His topic was
"Public Affairs Education in a Changing World."
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read his remarks
(.rtf)
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On
July 10, 2006, Dean Wallerstein spoke at the
Chautauqua Institution, during a weeklong
investigation of the obligations of citizenship
>>
read his remarks
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On April 28, 2004, Dean
Wallerstein issued A Strategic Vision for the
Maxwell School. It may be
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read on line or
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downloaded
as an MS Word file
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Also on April 28, Dean Wallerstein presented an abridged version of the
Strategic Vision to the Maxwell
community.
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online
video
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>> Also of
interest:
Maxwell Perspective Q&A
with the Dean
(from fall 2003)
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Before joining Maxwell, Dr. Wallerstein was vice president of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation, one of the worlds 10 largest philanthropic organizations, with assets
of nearly $7 billion. He directed the foundations international grant-making
division, known as the Program on Global Security and Sustainability (GSS).
From 1993 until 1997,
Mitchel Wallerstein served as deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense for Counterproliferation Policy, the
first presidential appointee in this position, and as Senior Representative for
Trade Security Policy. In the former capacity, he developed and implemented
policies and programs to prevent the proliferation of nuclear, biological and
chemical weapons and their means of delivery and worked to assure that the U.S.
military would be better prepared to deal with such threats in the future. In
the latter capacity, he was responsible for defense policy regarding the problem
of protecting sensitive technology. He participated in a number of international
negotiations on the design of national security export controls in the post-Cold
War era. During his tenure in the Department of Defense, Dr. Wallerstein helped
to found and subsequently co-chaired the Senior Defense Group on Proliferation at NATO. In January
1997, he was awarded the Secretary of Defense Medal for Outstanding Public Service,
and he received the Bronze Palm to that award in April 1998.
Prior to his service in the U.S. government,
Dean Wallerstein was the deputy executive officer of the National Research Council (NRC) of the National Academies of
Sciences and Engineering, which is a private, non-profit organization in Washington
that undertakes science and technology policy studies for and provides advice to the executive branch
and Congress. While at the NRC, he also directed a series of highly acclaimed
studies for the U.S. government on various other national security issues.
Dr. Wallersteins previous full-time academic career includes five years on
the faculty at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as well as an earlier
tenure-track appointment in the political science department at Holy Cross College.
From 1985-1989 he was an adjunct professor in the graduate program in science,
technology and public policy at George Washington University; from 1987-1993
he served in a similar capacity at the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown
University; and from 1992-1997 he was an adjunct professor at the Paul H. Nitze
School of Advanced International Studies at the Johns Hopkins University. Immediately
prior to joining the MacArthur Foundation, in 1998, Wallerstein held an appointment
as Distinguished Research Professor at the National Defense University in Washington.
He is the author of numerous books, articles, monographs and other
publications. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the International
Institute for Strategic Studies.
Mitchel
Wallerstein is the first Maxwell alumnus
to hold the deanship, having earned a master’s degree in
public administration (1972). He also holds a Ph.D. (1978) and M.S. (1977) in
political science from M.I.T.; his A.B. (1971)
is from Dartmouth College. He is married
with two grown children. His wife, Susan Perlik G72, received
her masters degree in special education from Syracuse University. In
2006, Dr. Wallerstein was elected as a fellow of the
National Academy of Public Administration.
Previous Deans of
the Maxwell School
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 <
William E. Mosher
1924-1946 >
Paul
H. Appleby
1947-1956 |
 <
Harlan
Cleveland
1956-1961
>
Steven
K. Bailey
1961-1969 |
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 >
Alan K. Campbell
1969-1976
>
Guthrie S. Birkhead
1977-1988 |

<
John L. Palmer
1988-2003
>> faculty page |
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This page current as of: January 18, 2006 |