Colin Diver
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Colin Diver became the fourteenth President of Reed College in Portland, Oregon on October 5, 2002. He replaced acting president Peter Steinberger, dean of Faculty, and succeeded Steven Koblik, who departed Reed College to run the Huntington Library in San Marino, CA.
His area of expertise includes administrative law and prior to Reed he was Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Prior to this he served first as special counsel to the office of Boston mayor Kevin White and then held a series of positions in Massachusetts state government, including assistant secretary of consumer affairs and undersecretary in the state's office for administration and finance. Diver then served for 14 years as a faculty member at Boston University School of Law, where he served as associate dean (1985-88) and dean (1988-89). He was a visiting professor at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and has held joint appointments in public policy at the Wharton School and the Boston University School of Management.
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[edit] Notable activities
Though Reed College, an exclusively undergraduate institution, does not have a law school, in September 2005 it was announced that Diver would be the coach of the inaugural Reed College mock trial team.
In 2005, Diver submitted an article to the Atlantic Monthly outlining the adverse effects of the U.S. News & World Reports college ranking system, called Is There Life After Rankings? The article outlines why Reed College chooses not to participate in the rankings competition process, and addresses the implication that non-participation necessarily handicaps colleges in competing for student applications and enrollment.
Among his publications, Diver is co-author of a multiple-edition textbook on administrative law, entitled, "Administrative Law: Cases and Materials." A selected list of Diver's additional publications includes:
4th ed. Aspen Pub., Inc. (with R. Cass & J. Beermann) (2002) “Genophobia: What Is Wrong with Genetic Discrimination?” Univ. of Penn. Law Rev. 149:1441 (2001) “Seeking Higher Ground,” Media Studies J. 12:120 (1998) (with Joan M. Diver) “Israeli Administrative Law from an American Perspective, “ Law and Government in Israel, 4:1 (1997) “Regulatory Precision, “ in Making Regulatory Policy (K. Hawkins & J. Thomas eds. 1989) “Presidential Powers, “ American Univ. Law Rev., 36:519 (1987) “No Compromises, “ J. of Policy Analysis & Mgt., 5:645 (1986)
[edit] Common Ground
Colin Diver and his wife lived and raised their sons in Boston during the 1960s in a neighborhood that was undergoing rapid gentrification. Their experiences with school desegregation and racial equality were chronicled in New York Times journalist J. Anthony Lukas’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book Common Ground. This in turn became a 1990 made-for-TV movie of the same name[1].
[edit] Academic background
Diver received his B.A., summa cum laude, from Amherst College in 1965, where he currently serves as a trustee. He later received an LL.B., magna cum laude, from Harvard Law School in 1968. He holds an honorary degree from Amherst.