Professor Stephen Cornell, Codirector, Harvard Project on Indian Economic Development

Stephen Cornell is Director of the Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy and Professor of Sociology and of Public Administration and Policy at The University of Arizona where he also serves as a faculty associate with the Native Nations Institute for Leadership, Management, and Policy.

Professor Cornell also is Codirector of the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development, a research program headquartered at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University that he co-founded in the late 1980s with Professor Joseph P. Kalt.

A specialist in political economy and cultural sociology, Dr. Cornell holds a Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago and taught at Harvard University for nine years before moving to the University of California, San Diego, in 1989 and then to the University of Arizona in 1998. With over 40 articles and numerous policy reports, Dr. Cornell has written widely on Indian affairs, economic development, collective identity, and ethnic and race relations. His books include: The Return of the Native: American Indian Political Resurgence, What Can Tribes Do? Strategies and Institutions in American Indian Economic Development (New York: Oxford UP, 1988; co-edited with Joseph P. Kalt); Ethnicity and Race: Making Identities in a Changing World (2007 and 1998; co-authored with Douglas Hartmann), now in its second edition; and What Can Tribes Do? Volume I: Strategies and Institutions in American Indian Economic Development (1992, co-edited with Joseph P. Kalt) and Volume II: Governance and Economic Development (forthcoming, co-edited with Amy Besaw and Joseph P. Kalt).

Dr. Cornell has spent much of the last 20 years working with Indigenous nations -- mostly in the United States but also in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand -- on self-governance, economic development, and tribal policy issues.

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