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Strategic Hiring
Duke's department of economics has revived
its ranks with a hiring coup that administrators see as a model
for boosting other departments.
The economics department hired nine new faculty members and researchers
this year. No other department at Duke has hired so many regular
rank professors—seven—in a single year in at least a decade.
The nine new professors come in addition to seven others who have
joined the department over the past four years.
A major component in the strategy to attract the new crop of scholars
was "cluster hiring"—recruiting groups of researchers
who share an approach to an academic discipline and have existing
relationships. "When you go to different places and have different
offers, you can also see the set of other people they're interested
in," says associate professor Patrick Bayer, who left Yale
to join the department this year.
Provost Peter Lange, who helped in the department's recruiting
efforts, notes, "A lot of the techniques that we've used in
economics are built into the Faculty Enhancement Initiative in
the new strategic plan, and we're going to use them in a number
of other departments across the university."
The enhancement in economics was the result of a plan that dates
back at least six years, to a departmental review commissioned
by Lange. "It was clear economics was an extremely important
core discipline in the social sciences," Lange says. "It
has a very strong paradigm, and so a lot of the other social sciences
draw on that core, either in a way of organizing some of their
work or as the paradigm against which they work.
"Furthermore, we had a great deal of undergraduate enrollment
in that major." The review found that "the department
was understaffed given both the size of the major and our comparative
look at other economics departments around the country and the
size it had been historically," he says.
In July 2003, Professor Thomas Nechyba, who had been working on
a strategy for transforming the department, became department chair.
He had conceived a plan to recruit early-career faculty members
accustomed to working across economics sub-disciplines. The plan
is not entirely implemented; the department is slated to hire three
additional people this year.
The success in the economics department notwithstanding, "cluster
hiring" can also work against Duke. Earlier this year, the
university lost a group of renowned geneticists to the University
of Miami. Margaret A. Pericak-Vance and Jeffery M. Vance, director
and associate director, respectively, of Duke's Center for Human
Genetics, accepted an offer from a former Duke colleague to join
him at Miami's medical school. As part of the recruitment package,
the Vances were able to bring along twenty of their colleagues,
including eight other faculty members. At Miami, the couple and
their colleagues plan to create a new Institute of Human Genomics
and a department of human genetics. The couple founded Duke's Center
for Human Genetics in 1996.
R. Sanders Williams, dean of Duke's medical school, praises the
Vances' contributions to Duke, but says he is not worried about
the future of the genetics center, noting that it has more than
250 employees.
While those leaving for Miami "will be missed," he says, "Duke
will regroup."
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