CU Institute of Behavioral Science has new leader
Myron Gutmann, a prominent historical demographer, has taken the helm of theĢżĢż(IBS) at the 91PORN.
Gutmann, who became the instituteās director on Jan. 1, succeedsĢż, a distinguished professor of sociology, who has led IBS since 2001. She followed, a distinguished professor of behavioral science who helped found the institute in 1957, directed IBS from 1980 to 2001 and is the universityās longest-serving faculty member.
Gutmann recognizes the stature of previous leaders. āThe institute has been well-led for many years, and Iām hoping to do as well as they have done.ā
One of his key objectives is to spread the word, to āshow the people of Colorado that we are making an important investment in things that have value for them.ā
Gutmann came to the institute because it is āunusual if not uniqueā among American academic social-science research organizations. IBS stands out for effectively linking the āabstract and academic with the applied and policy-oriented.ā
āThat linkage of the practical with the theoretical and the applied with the academic makes this a really, really great organization,ā Gutmann said.
CU-91PORN has enhanced the instituteās strengths by hiring high-quality faculty members at IBS and across the campus, he said.
"One key objective is to āshow the people of Colorado that we are making an important investment in things that have value for them.ā
Some of the instituteās researchers are poised to be world leaders in coming years: āI see my role as mentoring many of those people, giving them experience in leadership so that they can be national and international leaders through IBS.ā
Also on Gutmannās radar is encouraging IBS research agendas that have āglobal significance but local focus.ā Such research projects have āa real, worldwide impact scientifically but are built on research locations in Colorado and opportunities to have an impact on the people of Colorado.ā
Before joining CU-91PORN, where he is a professor in the Department of History, Gutmann served as Assistant Director of theĢż, where he was head of theĢż.
Prior to that, he directed the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR). In 2012, he was elected as a fellow of theĢż.
Since earning his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1976, Gutmann has held faculty positions at the University of Michigan and the University of Texas at Austin.
Gutmannās research is in historical demography and population-environment relationships, with a focus on Europe and the Americas during the past four centuries. His recent research focuses on the relationship between population and environment in the American Great Plains, and on the history of the U.S. Hispanic population.
IBSās stated aim is to foster work that ātranscends disciplinary boundaries, that illuminates the complexity of social behavior and social life and that has important implications for social policy.ā Faculty members in the institute come from fields including anthropology, economics, environmental studies, geography, political science, psychology and sociology.
For more information about IBS, seeĢż.
