Dr. Stephen P. Steinberg

Executive Director of the Penn National Commission on Society, Culture and Community

 

Stephen Steinberg

Public Discourse in America


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Dr. Stephen P. Steinberg is currently Executive Director of the Penn National Commission on Society, Culture and Community, and its national program on public discourse and community, the Penn Public Talk Project. Comprised of 48 leading scholars, political figures, and shapers of public opinion from the U.S. and abroad, the Commission was conceived and convened under the leadership of University of Pennsylvania President Judith Rodin and Dr. Steinberg to explore the alleged deterioration of public culture and political discourse, the failures of leadership, and their impact on the fragmentation of American communities. Since 1990, Dr. Steinberg has also served as Assistant to the President at the University of Pennsylvania, working closely with Presidents Sheldon Hackney, Claire Fagin, and Judith Rodin as a senior policy analyst, writer, and advisor on academic affairs, faculty relations, campus issues, University policy development, and national educational and cultural issues.

In 1997-98, he directed the 21st Century Project for the Undergraduate Experience, Penn's strategic initiative to enhance undergraduate education, coordinating major innovations in undergraduate curriculum, interdisciplinary studies, student services, residential living, information technology, and inter-school collaboration, and served as a member of the Council of Undergraduate Deans. This culminated more than a decade of Dr. Steinberg’s central involvement with Penn’s Provosts and four undergraduate schools in efforts to enhance Penn’s undergraduate curriculum and educational experience.

A specialist in twentieth century European philosophy, Dr. Steinberg earned his Ph.D. from Penn in 1989 and master's degrees from the New School for Social Research (in philosophy) and Columbia University (in journalism), after receiving his bachelor's degree "with distinction" from the University of Michigan. A Lecturer in Philosophy at Penn since 1981, he was also an active affiliated faculty member at the Solomon Asch Center for the Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict, which preceded the Penn Program in Ethnic Conflict, and the Institute for Strategic Threat Analysis and Response. His teaching, research, and writing interests include the philosophy of nationalism; public discourse, culture, and community; phenomenology, existentialism and postmodernist thought; psychoanalysis; and contemporary issues in higher education. He is co-editor and a contributor to Public Discourse in America: Conversation and Community in the Twenty-First Century (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003). A frequent interviewee on contemporary culture, public discourse, and civil society for both print and broadcast media, Dr. Steinberg was a featured expert commentator for USA Today during the 2000 presidential debates.

 

 

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