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Steven Pearlstein

Professor Pearlstein Gives the Annual Gortner Lecture

On Monday, April 16th, Professor Pearlstein gave the annual Gortner Lecture. This lecture is sponsored by the Department of Public and International Affairs. Every year, PIA honors a professional active in the field of public affairs and asks him or her to share insights with the Mason community. Professor Pearlstein gave a talk on “The Politics of Polarization: A Modern Tragedy of the Commons.”

Click here to read the Prof Pearlstein’s lecture.

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Steven Pearlstein

How Obamacare Will Save American Healthcare

Dr. "Zeke" Emanuel spoke on Obamacare at an open meeting of Prof. Pearlstein's GOVT 319 class.

Ezekiel “Zeke” Emanuel, one of the architects of the Obama health reform plan, spoke on “How Obamacare Will Save American Healthcare,” on Monday, April 16, at 1:30 p.m. in the Johnson Center Cinema.

The lecture was sponsored by the Department of Public and International Affairs and the Center for Health Policy Research and Ethics.

Emanuel is an oncologist and former chairman of the Department of Bioethics at the National Institutes of Health.  From 2009 until 2011, he was a key player in the White House health reform team, assigned to the Office of Management and Budget. (His brother, Rahm, was White House chief of staff and is now mayor of Chicago.) Emanuel’s writing on health policy issues appears regularly in the New York Times. He is also a commentator on MSNBC.

Last year, Emanuel was appointed chairman of the Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy at the University of Pennsylvania, where he now teaches in both the medical and business schools.

The talk was offered as an open meeting of the class GOVT 319 Issues in Government and Politics: Money, Markets and Economic Policy, taught by Steven Pearlstein, Robinson Professor of Public and International Affairs.  A question-and-answer period followed the presentation.

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Steven Pearlstein

Professor Pearlstein reviews “Grand Pursuit: The Story of Economic Genius” by Sylvia Nasar

Professor Pearlstein reviewed Grand Pursuit: The Story of Economic Genius by Sylvia Nasar in the Washington Post. Click here to read the review.

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Steven Pearlstein

Washington Post Columnist Steven Pearlstein to Become Newest Robinson Professor

The Robinson Professors’ Program is excited to announce that Steven Pearlstein, Washington Post columnist and Pulitzer Prize winner, will be joining Mason’s faculty as Robinson Professor of Public and International Affairs to start teaching classes in Fall 2011. Pearlstein will teach classes involving economics, public affairs, and the media, while continuing to write a weekly column for the Washington Post and moderating its website, On Leadership.

Pearlstein won the Pulitzer Prize in 2008 for his commentary on ex

plaining and anticipating the current financial crises. “During his 22 years at The Washington Post, Pearlstein has served as deputy business editor, defense industry reporter, economics correspondent and Canada correspondent.”

Click here for more information.

Steven Pearlstein, Washington Post Columnist and Pulitzer Prize Winner, will start teaching classes at Mason as Clarence J. Robinson Professor of Public and International Affairs in Fall 2011.
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Steven Pearlstein

Newest Robinson Professor Steven Pearlstein Scheduled to Teach First Course this Fall

The newest Robinson Professor, Steven Pearlstein, is scheduled to teach his first course this fall:

Government 319:001  Issues in Government and Politics:  Money, Markets and Economic Policy

No prerequisite. Applies basic economic concepts to an examination of fundamental issues facing the U.S. and global economies. Explores the way markets work, the reasons they sometimes fail and the role of government policy. Topics include productivity and economic growth, taxes, health care, globalization, income distribution and financial crises, with an emphasis on market structure, social institutions and the not-always rational behavior of investors and consumers.

Over the last decade, economics has moved from the periphery of the political conversation to its white hot center. This course will provide a familiarity with the fundamental issues facing the U.S. and global economies, along with an understanding of the economic principles that underlie them. The course is aimed at non-economics majors seeking the economic literacy necessary to do their jobs, manage their lives and participate intelligently as citizens in a democracy.  It is taught by a prize-winning journalist with a knack for demystifying complex economic ideas and policy choices and translating them into conversational English. There are no prerequisites and the course involves very little math. Critical thinkers with curious minds are strongly encouraged to enroll.

Course meets Mondays and Wednesdays, 1:30 – 2:45 in E 122.