Harvard Business School Dean Nohria Appointed

An appointment from within to lead management education

Nitin Nohria

Continuing a tradition of appointing the leadership of Harvard Business School (HBS) from within its faculty ranks, President Drew Faust today announced that Chapman professor of business administration Nitin Nohria will become dean effective July 1, succeeding Jay Light, who announced last December his plan to retire at the end of the current academic year. 

Nohria is co-chair of the HBS Leadership Initiative. He previously served as senior associate dean for faculty development and chair of the organizational behavior unit. Nohria joined the faculty in 1988, after earning his Ph.D. in management from MIT’s Sloan School of Management that year. He received his bachelor of technology degree in chemical engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology.

In making the appointment, Faust said of Nohria, “He’s an outstanding scholar, teacher, and mentor, with a global outlook and an instinct for collaboration across traditional boundaries. He has an intimate knowledge of the School and a strong appetite for innovation. He cares deeply about the School’s commitment to both rigor and relevance--to serious scholarship that has a powerful impact on practice. And he’s a person who not only studies leadership but embodies the qualities of a leader in how he engages people and ideas, in how he thinks about organizational change, and in how he sees the consequential challenges ahead.” 

Nohria’s research interests are described on his HBS webpage. His most recent book, Handbook of Leadership Theory and Practice, was co-edited with Rakesh Khurana, Bower professor of leadership development (and co-author of “The Pay Problem,” just published in the May-June Harvard Magazine).

Nohria moderated a discussion on leadership during the HBS centennnial conference, in 2008—at the  height of the financial panic that preceded the current deep recession; he was also a leader in conceiving the school's required first-year course on ethics, as reported here. 

The text of the announcement appears here. HBS has also collected more complete coverage, including a letter from President Faust to the HBS community, and Dean Nohria's remarks to the community, here.

 

You might also like

Chan School of Public Health Department Chair Departs for UCLA

Kari Nadeau, an environmental health leader, will serve as the dean of the Fielding School of Public Health.

Trump Administration Sues Harvard over Civil Rights

The March 20 suit seeks to rescind research grants that were restored in an earlier court ruling.

One of Harvard’s Oldest Structures Is Hiding Behind a Beer Garden

A crumbling wall in Harvard Square holds centuries of the city’s story, if you know how to read it.

Most popular

Radcliffe Acquires a Black Feminist’s Archive

An architect of Black women’s studies, Barbara Smith introduced the concepts of “identity politics” and “intersectionality.”

Department of Education Investigates Harvard Admissions and Antisemitism Claims

The University calls federal actions “retaliatory.” 

Can We Disagree Better? A Harvard Professor Has Tips.

Kennedy School professor of public policy Julia Minson on how to improve political conversations

Explore More From Current Issue

A woman in a black blazer holds a bottle of beer.

Introductions: Mallika Monteiro

A conversation with a beer industry executive

Graduates celebrate joyfully, wearing caps and gowns, with some waving and smiling.

Inside Harvard’s Most Egalitarian School

The Extension School is open to everyone. Expect to work—hard.

Older man in a green sweater holds a postcard in a warmly decorated office.

How a Harvard Hockey Legend Became a Needlepoint Artist

Joe Bertagna’s retirement project recreates figures from Boston sports history.