Daniel Carpenter

 

Daniel Carpenter

Freed Professor of Government
[ Curriculum Vitae ]
E-mail:
Phone:
Fax:
dcarpenter@gov.harvard.edu
617-495-8280
617-495-0438
CGIS N405
1737 Cambridge St.
Cambridge, MA 02138
Website: http://people.hmdc.harvard.edu/~dcarpent
Office Hours: Thursdays 1-4, Tuesdays by appt

Biographical Note:

Daniel Carpenter is Allie S. Freed Professor of Government and Director of the Center for American Political Studies in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University. He graduated from Georgetown University in 1989 with distinction in Honors Government. He received his doctorate in political science from the University of Chicago in 1996. He taught previously at Princeton University (1995-1998) and the University of Michigan (1998-2002). He joined the Harvard University faculty in 2002. Dr. Carpenter's primary interest is in the theoretical, historical and quantitative analysis of American political development, public bureaucracies and government regulation, particularly regulation of health products. His dissertation received the 1998 Harold D. Lasswell Award from the American Political Science Association and as a book - The Forging of Bureaucratic Autonomy: Reputations, Networks and Policy Innovation in Executive Agencies, 1862-1928 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001) - was awarded the APSA's Gladys Kammerer Prize as well as the Charles Levine Prize of the International Political Science Association. He is a two-time winner of the Herbert Kaufman Award for the Best Paper presented in the Public Administration Section of the American Political Science Association. Professor Carpenter has been a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, at the Brookings Institution, and the Santa Fe Institute. He has received grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Science Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (Scholars in Health Policy 1998-2000, Investigator Award in Health Policy Research 2004-2007). With Professors Elizabeth Armstrong (Princeton) and Marie Hojnacki (Penn State), Dr. Carpenter is working on a large empirical project on coverage of disease in the mass media and in public forums such as congressional hearings. The first publication from this project -- "Whose Deaths Matter? Mortality, Advocacy and Attention to Disease in the Mass Media," published in the Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law (2006), received the the 2007 Eliot Freidson Award for Best Publication from the Medical Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association. In 2007-2008, Professor Carpenter is a Guggenheim National Fellow and a Fellow-in-Residence at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. He is commencing a long-term project on petitioning in the nineteenth-century United States, particularly in the context of antislavery politics.