Stephen Cornell
Stephen Cornell is director of the Udall Center for
Studies in Public Policy. He also is a professor of sociology
and of public administration and policy at The University
of Arizona. Prior to joining the Center on July 1, 1998,
he was chair of the department of sociology at the University
of California, San Diego (UCSD). He is co-founder of
the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development,
a research program—headquartered at the Kennedy
School of Government at Harvard University—which
he continues to co-direct.
A specialist in political economy and cultural sociology,
Cornell holds a Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago
and taught at Harvard University for nine years before
moving to UCSD in 1989. He has written widely on Indian
affairs, economic development, collective identity, and
ethnic and race relations. Among his publications are
The Return of the Native: American Indian Political Resurgence,
What Can Tribes Do? Strategies and Institutions in American
Indian Economic Development (co-edited with Joseph P.
Kalt), and Ethnicity and Race: Making Identities in a
Changing World (co-authored with Douglas Hartmann).
Dr. Cornell has spent much of the last dozen years working
closely with Indian nations in the United States and
Canada on economic development, tribal governance, and
tribal policy issues. Among his recent policy-related
projects are a study of the on-and-off-reservation economic
and social impacts of Indian gaming operations and an
analysis of Native self-governance in Alaska. He serves
on the faculty of the National Executive Education Program
for Native American Leadership and is a member of the
editorial board of Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Contact:
Tel. (520) 884-4393
Email: scornell@u.arizona.edu