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New Professor Brings Historical Perspective to Policy Studies The newest member of the LBJ Schools permanent faculty is Assistant Professor Frank Gavin, an Oxford trained historian with teaching and research interests in U.S. policy and national security affairs. Gavin, who is offering a course this fall entitled "Policy Development: Foreign Policy Analysis," believes that one of the most effective methods of examining the U.S. foreign policy is through in-depth historical analysis. Gavins retrospective approach aims at using "lessons of the past" in understanding how the policymaking process works and why certain policies succeed and others fail. When asked why he opted to teach at the LBJ School instead of a history department, Gavin explained that he was drawn by the Schools "non-traditional" environment. He said he found the practical relationship between research and teaching as well as the real-world experience of its faculty and students appealing. He was also enthusiastic about the high level of interaction between faculty and students, which he described as "a unique situation." Gavin joins the School from the University of Virginia, where he directed the Presidency and Economic Policy Project at the Miller Center for Public Affairs. He previously was a John M. Olin Postdoctoral Fellow in National Security Affairs at Harvard University's Center for International Affairs and an International Security Fellow at Harvard's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. September 6, 2000 |
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News and Events Fall 2000 News Briefs ©2000
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs September 6, 2000 Comments to: lbjwmast@uts.cc.utexas.edu |
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