题 目:Leadership in Turbulent Times: What Does It Require?
主讲人:Dr. Scott Fritzen
Associate Professor, Evans School of Public Policy and Governance, University of Washington
主持人:程文浩
294俄罗斯专享会 教授
时 间:2015年11月16日(星期一)13:30-14:40
地 点:294俄罗斯专享会321教室
讲座简介:
Leaders in the public sector must create value through an active and strategic process of mission definition, stakeholder management and capacity development. This challenge is made much more difficult in times of crisis. This talk presents a framework for strategic management, and explores it using the dramatic case of Hurricane Katrina in the US in 2005.
主讲人简介:
Scott Fritzen joined the faculty of the Evans School in mid-2015. Prior to joining Evans, Fritzen served in various capacities at New York University – as Associate Provost at NYU’s portal campus in Shanghai, and Associate Dean and Interim Dean at NYU’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. He also served for a dozen years as a faculty member and as Vice Dean (Academic Affairs) at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy (National University of Singapore). He holds a PhD in Public and International Affairs and a Master in Public Affairs and Urban and Regional Planning from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University.
His teaching and research center on two themes: professional policy education and public sector reforms in developing countries, with a particular interest in the challenges of corruption control and decentralization. He is most recently the coauthor of The Lee Kuan Yew School: Building a Global Policy School in Asia (2012), and The Public Policy Primer: Managing the Policy Process (2010) and coeditor of The Handbook of Public Policy (2012) and Transforming Asian Governance (2009). He serves as managing editor of the International Review of Public Administration and on the editorial board of the Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis.
Fritzen’s consulting practice in Asia has included numerous team-leader assignments for public sector clients throughout Asia, and he speaks several Asian languages proficiently. He was the first American in the postwar era designated a Fulbright Fellow for Vietnam.