 |
Head
of the Department of Economics, Statistics
and Political Science |
| Davis
R. Dewey |
1903-1907 |
| Head
of the Department of History and Political Science |
| Charles
F. A. Currier |
1907-1918 |
| Heads
of the Department of Political Science |
| Robert
C. Wood |
1965-1966 |
| Ithiel
de Sola Pool |
1966-1969 |
| Robert
C. Wood |
1969-1970 |
| Eugene
B. Skolnikoff |
1970-1974 |
| Myron
Weiner |
1974-1977 |
| Alan
A. Altshuler |
1977-1981 |
| Donald
L. M. Blackmer |
1982-1989 |
| Suzanne
D. Berger |
1989-1992 |
| Richard
J. Samuels |
1992-1997 |
| Joshua
Cohen |
1997-2004 |
| Charles Stewart III |
2005- |
Early
courses in political science were taught as part of Course IX, General
Studies, until 1903 when the Department of Economics, Statistics,
and Political Science was established. In 1907 the department was
reorganized as the Department of Economics and Statistics, and political
science became part of the Department of History and Political Science.
In 1918 Charles Currier, the head of the department, became ill,
and a temporary merging of History with English became permanent
the following year.
Course
XIV, Economics and Social Science, began offering classes in Political
Science again in 1944 when Norman J. Padelford joined the faculty
to teach classes in international relations. In 1956 the department
was reorganized into three sections, including political science,
with Padelford as section head. In that year the faculty authorized
an S.B. degree in Economics, Politics, and Engineering; in 1958
a Ph.D. in Political Science was approved. In 1965 the political
science section became Course XVII, the Department of Political
Science.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
March 1998
|  |