ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Barbara J. Nelson is the first
permanent dean of the UCLA School of Public Affairs. Prior to her appointment
as Dean and
Professor of Public Policy, she was Vice President and Distinguished
Professor of Public Policy at Radcliffe College where her portfolio included
academic programs and strategic planning.
Her fields of expertise include
conflict mediation in civil society, social and economic policy, organizational
theory and behavior, and social
movements. She is the author of six books and over 60 articles and book
chapters. Leadership and Diversity: A Case Book (2004) demonstrates how
linking leadership and diversity improves policy education and policy
making. The Concord Handbook: How to Build Social Capital Across Communities
(written with Linda Kaboolian and Kathryn A. Carver, 2003) provides the
ideas and best practices for starting and sustaining organizations that
successfully bring together people from groups with historic conflicts.
Nelson and co-author Najma Chowdhury won the 1995 Victoria Schuck Award
for Women and Politics Worldwide, bestowed by the American Political
Science Association for the best book in the field of women and politics.
In 1989, Nelson and historian Sara Evans won the Policy Studies Organization’s
prize for the best book in the field of policy analysis for Wage Justice:
Comparable Worth and the Paradox of Technocratic Reform. Nelson is also
the author of Making an Issue of Child Abuse: Political Agenda Setting
for Social Problems (1984) and American Women and Politics (1984).
Nelson has worked or done
research in 24 countries, and has made major contributions to policy
making and civic life in the United States and
abroad. She is the Director of The Concord Project, which conducts research
and provides executive education on building bridging social capital—the
human and organizational resources that span social differences. She
was a founding member of the Minnesota Supreme Court’s Task Force
on Gender Equity in the Courts. She consulted with the Swedish Government
on its Parliamentary Commission on Power and Democracy, and has worked
with several United Nations organizations on questions of economic development
and political participation. She is a Member of the Board of the Public
Policy and International Affairs Program, and the National Association
of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration, and is a former board
member of the Community Investment Cabinet of the Los Angeles United
Way, the Center for the New West, Radcliffe College, the American Political
Science Association, and the National Council for Research on Women.
She was a Kellogg National Leadership Fellow and has held visiting fellowships
at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Villa Serbelloni in Bellagio, Italy
and the Russell Sage Foundation.
Before her appointment at Radcliffe, Barbara Nelson served on the faculties
of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton
University and the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs at
the University of Minnesota, where she was Director of the Center on
Women and Public Policy. She earned her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. in political
science at the Ohio State University, where she was elected to Pi Sigma
Alpha, the political science honorary society.
Dean Nelson's Faculty Page
|