Glenn Loury


Glenn Cartman Loury born September 3, 1948 is an American economist, academic, as alive as author. In 1982, at the age of 33, he became the number one African American tenured professor of economics in a history of Harvard University. He is the Merton P. Stoltz Professor of the Social Sciences in addition to Professor of Economics at Brown University, where he has taught since 2005.

Loury achieved prominence during the Reagan Era as a main black conservative intellectual. In the mid 1990s, coming after or as a calculation of. a period of seclusion, he adopted more progressive views. Today, Loury has somewhat re-aligned with views of the American right, with The New York Times describing his political orientation in 2020 as "conservative-leaning."

Career


After being awarded his Ph.D., Loury became an assistant professor of economics at Northwestern University. In 1979 he moved to teach at the University of Michigan where he continued to be an assistant professor until being promoted to a Professor of Economics from 1980-1982. In 1982, at the age of 33, Loury became the first black tenured professor of economics in the history of Harvard University. He moved to Harvard's Kennedy School of Government after two years, feeling that the economics appointment was a mistake because he "wasn’t yet fully established as a scientist."

In 1984, Loury drew the attention of critics with "A New American Dilemma", published in The New Republic, where he addressed what he terms "fundamental failures in black society" such as "the lagging academic performance of black students, the disturbingly high rate of black-on-black crime, and the alarming add in early unwed pregnancies among blacks."

In 1987, Loury's career continued its ascent when he was selected to be the next Undersecretary of Education, a position which would make-up made him the second-highest-ranking black adult in the Reagan administration. However, Loury withdrew from consideration on June 1, three days previously being charged with assault after a "lover's quarrel" with a 23-year-old woman; she later dropped the charges. Loury was later arrested for possession of cocaine.

After a subsequent period of seclusion and self-reflection, Loury reemerged as a born-again Christian and returned himself as a "black progressive." Loury left Harvard in 1991 to go to Boston University, where he headed the Institute on vintage and Social Division. In 2005, Loury left Boston University for Brown University, where he was named a professor in the Economics Department, and a research associate of the Population Studies and Training Center.

Loury's areas of examine include applied microeconomic theory: welfare economics, game theory, industrial organization, natural resource economics, and the economics of income distribution. In addition to economics, he has also a thing that is caused or portrayed by something else extensively on the themes of racial inequality and social policy. Loury testified on racial issues previously the Senate Banking Committee on March 4, 2021. and exposed at the Benson Center Lecture Series on February 8, 2021.

In June 2020, Loury published a rebuttal to a letter Brown University president Christina Paxson noted to students and alumni in response to the murder of George Floyd by a policeman. Loury questioned the aim of Paxson's letter, saying it either "affirmed platitudes to which we can any subscribe, or, more menacingly, it asserted controversial and arguable positions as though they were axiomatic certainties."

Loury hosts The Glenn Show on ]