Skip to content
Harvard Magazine
Editor’s Highlights

Sign up to be notified of new issues.

See a sample newsletter

Precedent-Setting Presidential Search

 
Forward this page to a friend
Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
(Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from Harvard Magazine
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this page from the Harvard Magazine web site.

The search for a successor to President Lawrence H. Summers will involve expanded outreach to the Harvard community. In a March 30 news release, the University announced that, consistent with past practice, the Corporation had formed a search committee comprising its six members other than the president, plus three Overseers. But beyond encouraging faculty, students, staff, and alumni to weigh in through letters and private conversations, the committee will conduct its business in two new ways.

• Meetings, there and here. The committee “plans to consult with alumni in a series of meetings, at various locations beyond Cambridge and Boston as well as locally,” to assure that it hears a variety of perspectives. (Alumni groups already scheduled to meet locally will also be able to devote time to discussing the search, and the Board of Overseers will play a “key consultative role” directly and as a further channel through which alumni can communicate.)

• Advisory bodies. The Corporation will appoint two advisory groups—of faculty and of students—“from a broad cross-section of the University.” Their chairs, and the president of the Harvard Alumni Association, will “sit with the search committee from time to time,” and representatives of the search committee will “periodically attend” meetings of the advisory groups. These efforts are intended to convey ideas about Harvard’s opportunities and challenges to the search committee, and to help frame the questions the committee should have in mind as it evaluates nominees.

These measures create a mechanism for broader input in the search without making alumni, faculty, and students formal participants in the process; they also recognize the increasingly broad geographic scope of the Harvard community.

The Overseer members of the search committee are Frances D. Fergusson, Ph.D. ’73, president of Vassar College; Susan L. Graham ’64, Chen distinguished professor in electrical engineering and computer science, University of California, Berkeley; and William F. Lee ’72, co-managing partner of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, a law firm. Comments on the search can be sent in confidence to psearchatharvard [dot] edu or by mail to Harvard University Presidential Search Committee, Loeb House, 17 Quincy Street, Cambridge 02138.

Forward this page to a friend
Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
(Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from Harvard Magazine
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this page from the Harvard Magazine web site.

Issues > May-June 2006 > John Harvard's Journal

May-June 2006

A Presidency's Early End

May-June 2006

Weighing In

May-June 2006

The Interim Agenda

May-June 2006

The Way Forward

May-June 2006

Bolstering Business

May-June 2006

Aid Augmented

May-June 2006

Kevin Eggan

May-June 2006

Gender Gains

May-June 2006

University People

May-June 2006

Yesterday's News

May-June 2006

Scholars' Haven

May-June 2006

Military Recruiting Upheld

May-June 2006

Women's Center

May-June 2006

The Schools' Size

May-June 2006

"A Unique Experience"

May-June 2006

Brevia

May-June 2006

The Busy-ness School

May-June 2006

Up Three Times

May-June 2006

Track Coach Haggerty Retires

May-June 2006

Spring Lax Snapshots

May-June 2006

Swashbuckling National Champions

Add a new comment

Your email address is kept private and will not be shown publicly
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <ul> <ol> <li> <blockquote>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • SmartyPants will translate ASCII punctuation characters into “smart” typographic punctuation HTML entities.

More information about formatting options

Copyright ©1996–2008
Harvard Magazine Inc.
Contact the webmaster