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Faculty:
Charles
T. Clotfelter, Director of the Center for the Study of Philanthropy
and Voluntarism, is Z. Smith Reynolds Professor of Public Policy
Studies, Professor of Economics, and Professor of Law. He
is also a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic
Research. A graduate of Duke (A.B., 1969) and Harvard University
(Ph.D., 1974), he has been at Duke since 1979. While at Duke, he
has served as Vice Provost for Academic Policy and Planning, Vice
Chancellor and Vice Provost for Academic Programs.
He is the author of After Brown: The Rise and Retreat of
School Desegregation (2004), Buying the Best: Cost Escalation
in Elite Higher Education (1996), and Federal Tax Policy
and Charitable Giving (1985). He is the editor of Who
Benefits from the Nonprofit Sector? (1992), Studies
of Supply and Demand in Higher Education (with Michael Rothschild)
(1993), Philanthropy and the Nonprofit Sector in a Changing
America (with Thomas Ehrlich) (1999), and Amateurs in
Public Service: Volunteering, Service-Learning, and Community
Service Programs, a special issue of Law and Contemporary
Problems 62 (Autumn 1999).
A full list of Professor Clotfelter's publications can be found here.
Joel L.
Fleishman, Professor of Law and Public Policy Studies, is a
graduate of the University of North Carolina (A.B., 1955, J.D.,
1959) and Yale University (LL.M., 1960). Mr. Fleishman serves
as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Urban Institute, is
a member (and former Chairman) of the Board of Trustees of the
John and Mary R. Markle Foundation, and is a fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences. In Fall 2004, Mr. Fleishman was appointed
co-convener of the Expert Advisory Group, an eight-person group
assembled by the Independent Sector to advise its Panel on the
Nonprofit Sector. The Panel was formed at the encouragement of
the U.S. Senate Finance Committee to prepare recommendations for
Congress on how to improve the oversight and governance of charitable
organizations. Mr. Fleishman is a former member of the Board of
Directors of the Council on Foundations.
A list of Professor Fleishman's publications can be found here.
Kristin
A. Goss, Assistant Professor of Public Policy Studies and Political
Science. A former reporter at The Chronicle of Philanthropy, her
scholarly research focuses on why people do (or don’t) participate
in political life and how their participation (or non-participation) affects
public policymaking. Her recent work has focused on the role of interest
groups, voluntary associations, and organized philanthropy in elevating
issues onto the policymaking agenda.
Goss is author of Disarmed: The Missing Movement for Gun Control in
America (Princeton University Press, 2006) and is completing a book
on the changing policy priorities of women’s voluntary associations
from 1880-2000. In conjunction with Professor Joel Fleishman, Professor
Goss is also beginning a study of philanthropic foundations’ role
in democratic pluralism. Her work has appeared in Social Science Quarterly,
Women & Politics, Fordham Law Review, and Nonprofit and Voluntary
Sector Quarterly, and she contributed to Robert Putnam’s seminal
book, Bowling Alone (Simon & Schuster, 2000). She received
a B.A. degree with high honors from Harvard; a master’s degree in
public policy from Duke; and a Ph.D. in political science from Harvard.
A list of Professor Goss's publications can be found here.
Staff:
Robert Malme
Phone (919) 613-7314
Fax (919) 681-8288
e-mail address: rmalme@duke.edu
Contact Information:
Center for the Study of Philanthropy and Voluntarism
Duke University
P.O. Box 90249
Durham, NC 27708-0249
919/613-7314 (Phone)
919/681-8288 (FAX)
e-mail address: rmalme@duke.edu
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