Trade Economist Wins SSRC’s First Albert O. Hirschman Prize
Dani Rodrik Honored for Innovative Approach Linking Trade and Social Welfare
The Social Science Research Council (SSRC) has announced that Dani Rodrik,
a professor of international political economy at the John F. Kennedy
School of Government, Harvard University, will become the first
recipient of its newly instituted Albert O. Hirschman Prize.
“I’m delighted with the choice of Dani Rodrik as the first recipient of the SSRC’s new Albert Hirschman Prize,” said Craig Calhoun,
president of the SSRC. “Professor Rodrik’s work on development
economics exemplifies the kind of social science values and engagements
evident in Albert Hirschman’s work, as well as the kind of necessary
knowledge the Social Science Research Council aims to bring to public
affairs.”
The Hirschman Prize is awarded annually by the Social Science Research
Council to scholars who have made outstanding contributions to
international, interdisciplinary social science research, theory, and
public communication, in the tradition of Albert Hirschman.
A professor at Columbia, Yale, Harvard and for many years at the
Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, Hirschman pioneered the
field of economics and politics in developing countries, particularly
Latin American development. Author of such classic works as The
Strategy of Economic Development; Exit, Voice, and Loyalty;
and The Passions and the Interests, Hirschman has long been acclaimed
for his creative, interdisciplinary approach to academic research.
Rodrik was the unanimous choice of a selection committee consisting of current and former SSRC board members: Barry Eichengreen,
George C. Pardee and Helen N. Pardee professor of economics and
political science at the University of California, Berkeley
(Eichengreen currently serves on the board’s executive committee); Albert Fishlow,
professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University
and director of Columbia’s Institute of Latin American Studies as well
as its Center for the Study of Brazil (Fishlow served on the SSRC board
from 1991 to 1998); and Arminio Fraga, the founding director of the Rio de Janeiro based investment company, Gávea Investimentos, and a current member of the SSRC board.
“Professor Rodrik’s research is distinguished by analytical and
empirical rigor, combined with a critical attitude toward policy
orthodoxy,” said Eichengreen, who led the Hirschman Prize selection
process from a field of 31 nominees. “While an economist by training,
Rodrik takes a broad interdisciplinary view of problems of
international trade and economic development, paying careful attention
to their social, political, and historical dimensions—very much in the
Hirschman tradition,” he noted.
“This is quite an unexpected honor, and quite a humbling one as well,”
said Rodrik upon learning of the committee’s decision. “Albert
Hirschman’s playful mind, unmatched erudition, and innumerable
contributions to social science have long been an inspiration in my own
work. He has set the standard that those of us who follow in his
footsteps can only aspire to reach.”
On Nov. 1, 2007, Rodrik will deliver the annual Albert O. Hirschman
Prize Lecture at a ceremony in New York City. The lecture will be
published by the SSRC as part of its new Albert O. Hirschman Lecture
Series as well as posted on the Council’s Web site. Rodrik will also
receive an award of US$10,000.
About the Hirschman Prize:
The Albert O. Hirschman Prize is awarded annually by the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) to scholars who have made outstanding contributions to international, interdisciplinary social science research, theory, and public communication. Nominating letters should be sent to Craig Calhoun, President, Social Science Research Council, 810 7th Ave., 31st Floor, New York, NY 10019, or via e-mail to president@ssrc.org. The deadline for nominations for the 2008 prize is 15 November 2007.
About the Social Science Research Council
The Social Science Research Council (SSRC) engages practitioners, policymakers, and academic researchers in all the social sciences and related professions, as well as in the humanities and natural sciences, on important public issues, with the goal of bringing necessary knowledge to public action.


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