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James
Gustave Speth
Dean, Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies
In
its century-long history, the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental
Studies has been fortunate to find leaders of distinction. The new dean
of the School, James Gustave Speth is a worthy successor to that tradition.
In the words of Richard Levin, President of Yale University, Dean Speth's
"experience and global credentials could not be stronger."
Dean
Speth comes to Yale's environment school from the United Nations, where
he served from 1993 through 1999 as Administrator of the Development Program
(UNDP), the principal arm of the UN for the funding and coordination of
technical assistance and development. Prior to his tenure at the UN, he
founded the World Resources Institute in 1982 and served as its president
until January 1993. Based in Washington D.C., WRI is a center for policy
research and technical assistance on environment and development issues.
Following his tenure at WRI he served as senior advisor to President-elect
Clinton's transition team, heading the group on natural resources, energy
and the environment.
Before
founding WRI, Dean Speth chaired President Carter's Council on Environmental
Quality, and then went on to teach environmental and constitutional law
for two years as a professor of Georgetown University. From 1970 to 1977
he was senior attorney wth the Natural Resources Defense Council, an organization
he co-founded. Prior to NRDC, Dean Speth was law clerk to Supreme Court
Justice Hugo Black.
Dean
Speth graduated summa cum laude from Yale College and attended
Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar earning a M.Litt. in economics.
He holds an J.D. from Yale Law School, and recently received an honorary
Doctor of laws degree from Clark University. He is married to Cameron
Speth and they have three children.
The Yale
School of Forestry and Environmental Studies was founded in 1900 by Gifford
Pinchot to educate a corps of professionals in proper management of the
forests and wilderness areas of the United States. Today, the School is
a graduate and professional school engaged in the interdisciplinary study
of environmental and natural resource issues. Its mission is to provide
leadership, through education and research, in the management of natural
resources systems and in the solutions of environmental problems.
"The
challenge we face as we enter the school's second century is extraordinary,
for never has the need been greater for a new generation of environmental
leaders and for new ideas and insights," Dean Speth has said. "Environmental
challenges are growing daily more serious and increasingly linked to subjects
we once thought remote from our field. Environmental leaders must be prepared
to understand the international context in which many issues arise and
t o integrate environmental, economic and developmental concerns." To
again quote Yale's President Richard Levin, "Gus Speth's qualities and
background equip him admirably for leadership in the School and the wider
University."
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