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> KENNEDY SCHOOL CREATES CENTER
Kennedy School Creates a Center For Public Leadership
Reprinted
from John F. Kennedy
School of Government web site
March 21, 2000
News
and Communications
CAMBRIDGE
–Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government will open a Center
for Public Leadership this fall, seeking to enrich and improve the
quality of public leadership in the United States and abroad, Dean
Joseph S. Nye, Jr. announced today.
Two members
of the Kennedy School faculty, David Gergen and Ronald Heifetz,
will serve as co-directors of the new center. Gergen, who became
a Professor of Public Service last year, is a former White House
adviser to four Presidents and continues to work as a journalist.
Heifetz is Director of the Leadership Education Project at the Kennedy
School and author of Leadership Without Easy Answers.
The new enterprise
aims to become a pre-eminent center for research, education and
training in leadership. "A central mission of the Kennedy School
since its inception has been the preparation of men and women for
public leadership," said Nye. "In recent years, we have been intensifying
our efforts. Now, with the creation of this Center, we can carry
our endeavors to an entirely new level. I believe that the School’s
investment in this new intellectual area will illuminate some of
the most important issues facing our global future – understanding
what makes good leaders and training individuals to lead in a world
changing at warp speed. It is an exciting enterprise for the School
and one of my highest priorities as Dean."
Generous seed
funding by Leslie and Abigail Wexner and the Wexner Foundation of
Columbus, Ohio are enabling the School to take this initiative.
Leslie Wexner, founder and Chairman of The Limited, Inc., and his
wife Abigail are among the country’s foremost philanthropists and
have already endowed several programs at Harvard.
The primary
focus and target audience for the Center’s programs during its first
three years will be those serving in government. The Center will
be built upon three central pillars:
Research
– Among its early initiatives, a research venture fund will enable
the Center to encourage scholars at Harvard and beyond to study
questions that are not yet fully answered in the newly developing
field of leadership. The Center will also conduct interviews with
an array of public leaders, seeking to extract practical lessons
for others and to develop case studies.
Teaching
and Training – The Center will work with existing and new members
of the Kennedy School faculty to build up leadership programs for
students enrolled at the School. It is also anticipated that the
Center will develop new executive offerings for mayors and city
officials, community leaders, governors and high-level state executives,
Congressional representatives, officials in the Executive Branch,
and emerging international leaders.
Outreach
– The Center will expand the Kennedy School’s executive programs
for leadership educators and will form alliances with a number of
programs such as the Council of Women World Leaders, which was recently
started at Harvard. Later this year, the Center will be working
with the Israeli Directors General Program.
Professor David
Gergen commented, "Students at the Kennedy School have demonstrated
keen interest in learning more about the arts and skills of leadership.
This new center, I hope, will not only meet their aspirations but
will also serve as a major new resource for research and training
of public leaders here and overseas. All of us engaged in this project
are grateful to the Wexners for helping us get started, and we look
forward to working with others at the Kennedy School to build from
here."
"For nearly
twenty years, my colleagues and I have been examining leadership,
with and without authority, and the tasks and competencies required
to mobilize people for progress on the toughest of public challenges,"
said Ronald Heifetz.
"Through
this work, we’ve developed innovative and experiential ways to teach
leadership in courses and programs with life-changing impact on
professionals who come and study at the Kennedy School from public
life around the world. Yet a vast frontier of research and teaching
in the practice of leadership lies before us -- in policy contexts,
institutional contexts, and in different cultures. We are eager
to join with colleagues at Harvard and from institutions here and
abroad to improve the quality of public leadership, and thereby
improve the quality and sustainability of life in our communities
and societies."
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