Craig Calhoun

Craig Calhoun has been President of the Social Science
Research Council since
1999. He is also University Professor of the Social
Sciences at NYU.
Under Calhoun's leadership, the SSRC has been reinvigorated
as a leader of
public social science, research on critical social issues,
and support for
leading young researchers. He has launched new work on
knowledge institutions
and innovation, on information technology, on HIV/AIDS and
social
transformation, and on media, democracy and the public
sphere.
After receiving his doctorate from Oxford University,
Calhoun taught at the
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill from 1977 to
1996. He was Dean of the
Graduate School and the founding Director of the University
Center for
International Studies. He has also taught at the Beijing
Foreign Studies
University, the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences
Sociales, and the
Universities of Asmara, Khartoum, Oslo, and Oxford.
Calhoun's own empirical research has ranged from Britain
and France to China and
three different African countries. His study of the
Tiananmen Square protests of
1989 resulted in the prize-winning book, Neither Gods
Nor Emperors: Students and
the Struggle for Democracy in China (California, 1994).
Among his other works
are Nationalism (Minnesota, 1997), Critical
Social Theory: Culture, History, and
the Challenge of Difference (Blackwell, 1995), and
several edited collections
including Habermas and the Public Sphere (MIT,
1992), Hannah Arendt and the
Meaning of Politics (Minnesota, 1997), Understanding
September 11th (New Press,
2002), and Lessons of Empire (New Press, 2005). He
was also editor in Chief of
the Oxford Dictionary of the Social Sciences. In
more than ninety articles, he
has also addressed the impact of technological change; the
organization of
community life; the relationship among tort law, risk, and
business
organizations; the anthropological study of education,
kinship, and religion;
and problems in contemporary globalization. Calhoun's work
has been translated
into more than a dozen languages.
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Series
Books:Multicultural Politics, March 2005
Hardcover
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