Sign up for daily emails to get the latest Harvard news.
Harvard University
Altered microbiome, sleep deprivation, increase in alcohol consumption among possible culprits in 30-year global trend
You don't have to remove the appliance to stay safe, but switching to electric recommended
Retired justice says just part of job, details lessons from Ted Kennedy, explains free-range questions
Her death presents opportunity to clear nostalgic haze surrounding monarchy, British brutality around end of empire
© 2022 The President and Fellows of Harvard College
Massachusetts Hall in Harvard Yard.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Following Larry Bacow’s announcement last month that he plans to step down from the Harvard presidency at the end of the 2022-2023 academic year, the Harvard Corporation has begun the search for the University’s 30th president.
In a message to the community on Thursday, Penny Pritzker ’81, senior fellow of the Harvard Corporation and chair of the presidential search committee, outlined aspects of the process and encouraged faculty, staff, students, alumni, and others to convey their views to the committee on opportunities, challenges, and priorities ahead, as well as key qualities and experience to seek in the University’s next president. She said the committee also invites nominations of individuals who warrant serious consideration for the role.
“Important to our process of finding the University’s next president is hearing diverse views from across the Harvard community and beyond. We hope that many of you will share your thoughts,” she wrote.
Pritzker noted that advice and nominations may be sent to the search committee in any of three ways: by email to [email protected], by answering a set of questions posted online, or by sending a letter to the Harvard Presidential Search Committee, Loeb House, 17 Quincy St., Cambridge, MA 02138. Responses will be held in confidence.
“Your replies will be an essential means for the search committee to develop an increasingly robust and nuanced picture of Harvard, its current trajectory, and its future aspirations — and a fully informed view of the leadership that can best serve the University in the years to come,” Pritzker wrote.
In accordance with the University’s charter, the Harvard Corporation will elect the new president, with the counsel and consent of the Board of Overseers. As in previous searches, the search committee includes the members of the Corporation other than the president, together with three members of the Board of Overseers. To help encourage and structure community input, the search committee will appoint and work with advisory committees of faculty, students, and staff, who will include representatives from across Harvard’s Schools. The committee also plans to consult with various alumni groups, leaders in higher education, and others in a position to offer thoughtful counsel. The broad outreach is intended to elicit a wide range of perspectives on Harvard and its future, and to ensure an inclusive pool of nominations.
“In this search, we will seek a person of high intellectual distinction, with proven qualities of leadership, a devotion to excellence in education and research, a capacity to guide a complex institution through times of change, a talent for advancing progress and collaboration across a wide span of domains, a commitment to embracing diversity along many dimensions as a source of strength, and a dedication to the ideals and values central to our community of learning,” Pritzker wrote.
She continued: “We aim to identify a president who, like past Harvard leaders, will bring not only a deep devotion to Harvard’s excellence, but also a passion for how Harvard — through its myriad programs and extraordinary people — can be a force for good in the world.”
The members of the presidential search committee are:
Expert welcomes aggressive move toward electric vehicles, but sees one ‘huge mistake’ policymakers need to avoid and a surefire way to anger drivers
Former Bioethics Fellow Jay Baruch ’02 recalls impatient patient who pulled her own breathing tube (and lived to tell about it) in new memoir
Altered microbiome, sleep deprivation, increase in alcohol consumption among possible culprits in 30-year global trend
Research opportunities with close faculty collaboration and 49 newly created secondary fields are among the opportunities that await the Class of 2026.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer