Douglas Hicks, provost and dean of the faculty, announced that the university’s Board of Trustees approved several appointments and promotions for faculty members.
“I ask everyone to join me in congratulating these highly valued colleagues for their significant professional accomplishments,” said Hicks.
Faculty members named to continuous tenure and promoted to associate professor are:
— , Environmental Studies Program
— , Department of Philosophy
— , Department of Economics
Promoted to full professor:
— , Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures
— , Department of Economics
Hicks also announced several appointments, which President Jeffrey Herbst and he had recommended in consultation with the Dean’s Advisory Council. The appointments, confirmed by the board at its most recent meeting, are:
, associate professor of religion and Jewish studies, has been named Murray W. and Mildred K. Finard Associate Professor in Jewish studies, and associate professor of religion.
Cushing’s research is on the reception and culture-forming influences of the Bible. She has published seven articles and co-edited two volumes. Her book titled Sustaining Fictions incorporates literary criticism and theory, Midrashic studies, and translation theory.
Hicks said that in her teaching, Cushing emphasizes close reading, critical thinking, strong writing, articulate oral expression, active participation, and ongoing exchanges between students in and outside the classroom. Her service is extensive, including service on the Institutional Review Board, serving as university professor for Core 151: Legacies of the Ancient World, and co-chairing the strategic planning working group on Living the Liberal Arts. She is currently serving as program director of
, professor of history, has been named Russell Distinguished University Professor of history.
Douglas has been at since 1996, teaching highly rigorous courses in that are widely popular with students. Hicks said that Douglas expects students to read carefully, write clearly, and work diligently. They do, and appreciate and respect his rigor and passion. His stature is just as high as a scholar.
Douglas is the author of four books, and an edited volume. His most recent book, Orderly and Humane: The Expulsion of the Germans After the Second World War (Yale University Press, 2012, with German and French editions published simultaneously), has been controversial and significant and has garnered multiple international prizes. He received the prestigious, bi-annual from the German government, as well as several other honors, including the 2013 , given by the American Historical Association. It was one of the Books of the Year for 2012 by The Atlantic.
Hicks added that Douglas has also contributed unstintingly to his department, including serving as its chair plus leading the London History Study Group six times and the Geneva Study Group two times, and to the university, including service on the Committee on Promotion and Tenure, the Committee on Graduate Fellowships, and the Faculty Development Committee.
, professor of , has been named Richard J. and Joan Head Chair in philosophy.
Hicks said McCabe is a highly regarded colleague within his division and across the university. His substantial contributions include his current work of directing the, and prior service in chairing the Department of Philosophy and serving as university professor for the Core 152 program.
McCabe’s scholarship has centered on questions of what he describes as “the nature, grounding, and extent of political authority in communities where citizens disagree deeply on important issues of value.” His ongoing concern with the liberal state, and the arguments of its critics and defenders, is revealed in numerous scholarly essays as well as his book, Modus Vivendi Liberalism: Theory and Practice (2010, Cambridge University Press).
McCabe has led the philosophy/religion study group in St. Andrews, Scotland, and has served as a fellow in the Centre for Ethics, Philosophy, and Public Affairs at the University of St. Andrews.
, professor of Russian and Eurasian and Jewish studies, has been named Distinguished Chair in Jewish Studies and professor of Jewish studies and Russian and Eurasian studies.
Nakhimovsky’s research interests center on Russian-Jewish literature, 20th-century Russian literature, Russian- and early 20th-century American-Jewish everyday life. Her most recent scholarly work includes Dear Mendl, Dear Reyzl: Yiddish Letter Manuals in Russia and America and a translation of Grisha Bruskin, Past Imperfect.
Hicks said Nakhimovsky is highly regarded as a demanding teacher who cares deeply about the achievement of her students. She has also contributed in important ways to the development of the general education program, and is serving as an elected member of the Committee on Promotion and Tenure. She has served as director of Russian and Eurasian Studies, a position she currently holds, and of Jewish Studies.
, professor of , has been named Charles G. Hetherington Professor of mathematics.
Hicks said that Schult is an applied mathematician with broad interests encompassing mathematical modeling of combustion (i.e., spread of fire), spread of disease, applied graph theory, and network structure and functional properties. The National Science Foundation has supported his research, and his recent publications have appeared in the journals Combustion Theory and Modeling, Physical Review E, and Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science.
Schult also has developed software, most notably the internationally heralded NetworkX, a Python package useful for the study of the structure and dynamics of complex networks. His service to the university community has included work as statistical consultant for the Campus Climate Survey, as Co-PI on the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Undergraduate Science Education Program Grant, as department chair, and his current appointment as director of the