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Originally published on May 12, 2020
The Carnegie Corporation of New York announced today that聽聽public policy professor聽聽is one of 27 recipients of this year鈥檚 Andrew Carnegie Fellows Program awards.
鈥淩eally quite a surprise,鈥 Goldstone said upon learning of the award.
Goldstone, who has been with the Schar School at 亚洲AV since 2003, is the director of the Schar School鈥檚聽聽and is the Virginia E. and John T. Hazel Chair Professor of Public Policy.
The award provides a $200,000 stipend鈥攖he largest of its kind, the corporation says鈥攖oward funding research in the social sciences and humanities. Goldstone has spent his career researching the intersection of population trends and, he said, is about to take an even deeper dive.
Goldstone begins his fellowship in September. His research, he said, will look at how different population trends will affect international economy and security. It will be an extension of the research he has been doing through a multi-year, $1.1 million grant from the Charles Koch Foundation he received in March.
But whereas the Koch grant mainly provides summer salaries and support for Goldstone鈥檚 Schar School PhD student-researchers, the Carnegie fellowship will allow him to take a year to write what he hopes will be a significant book addressing these issues.
鈥淩ight now, population change is really confronting the world with lots of challenges,鈥 said Goldstone, who was nominated for the fellowship by the university. 鈥淗ow are we going to support and care for aging generations when we鈥檙e facing a huge economic downturn? How will the young, fast-growing labor force in Africa and South Asia be productively employed?鈥
鈥淎nd if the shift in world population in religion is leading to a world where Muslims will be more numerous than Christians for the first time in history, we need to work out a cooperative relationship between them,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 do that and deteriorate into confrontation and conflict, then we go back to the Middle Ages, where Islam and Christianity are at war all over the world.鈥
Goldstone said he has been able to pursue these questions because of the Schar School鈥檚 rich interdisciplinary environment, not to mention its 鈥渨onderful graduate students.鈥
鈥淛ack Goldstone is that rare social scientist whose scholarly insights have shaped the thinking of both academic researchers and policy professionals on such critical topics as revolutions and political demography,鈥 said Schar School Dean聽. 鈥淗is work embodies the Schar School鈥檚 commitment to leading both scholarship and public policy impact.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 another affirmation,鈥澛燝oldstone said of his fellowship,聽鈥渢hat the work my colleagues and I are doing at Mason on global population trends addresses major social challenges.聽I am deeply honored to get this support from the Carnegie Foundation.鈥
He is the third Mason professor and the second from the Schar School to receive the award, following the Schar School鈥檚聽聽(2015), director of the聽, and聽聽(2017), deputy director of the聽.
Mason is one of just 15 universities nationwide with three or more Carnegie Fellows, including Yale, Duke, Harvard, Stanford and MIT.
Additional reporting by Buzz McClain.