DanielDrezner.com — maintained by University of Chicago assistant professor of political science, Daniel Drezner — is one of the first weblogs that I regularly reviewed and it remains one of my favorites. Over its three year existence, it has become one of the most popular academic blogs in the blogosphere.
Professor Drezner disclosed this past weekend that his application for tenure at the University of Chicago had been denied and that, as a result, he will be moving on from his position there. This New York Sun article (hat tip to Howard Bashman) is already speculating that Professor Drezner’s popular blog was one of the factors working against him in the notoriously stuffy academic world of considering tenure applications. Larry Ribstein — who is at the forefront of addressing academic issues relating to blogging — has more analysis here.
Regardless of whether Professor Drezner’s blogging had any effect on the rejection of his tenure application, my sense is that this is a temporary setback for him. He is an insightful commentator on politics generally, and on foreign affairs and political economy issues in particular, so he will not be without gainful employment opportunities for long. UChicago’s loss will be someone else’s gain.
Daily Archives: October 11, 2005
Nobel Laureate Thomas C. Schelling
Former University of Maryland economics professor Thomas C. Schelling was named the winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science yesterday along with Israeli economist Robert J. Aumann for their work in game theory, which essentially attempts to explain the choices that competitors make in situations that require strategic thinking. Mr. Schelling was the mentor of Marginal Revolution’s Tyler Cowen, so don’t miss Tyler’s excellent overview of Professor Schelling’s career and extraordinary contributions to economics, foreign policy and clear thinking. Tim Harford of the Financial Times also chimes in. Enjoy.
Does Time Inc.’s management read Clear Thinkers?
Last month, this post commented on the interesting story of former University of Alabama football coach and current University of Texas at El Paso football coach Mike Price‘s $20 million libel lawsuit against Time Inc. That post ended with the following comment:
“Does anyone else get the sense that Time needs to settle this case quietly?”
Well, Time Inc. has taken that advice and settled with Coach Price.
Time Inc. made a very good decision. Vanderbilt’s football team would have a better chance of beating the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa than Time Inc. would have had of prevailing against Coach Price in a Birmingham courtroom.