William P. Leahy
William Leahy | |
---|---|
President of Boston College | |
Assumed office July 31, 1996 | |
Preceded by | J. Donald Monan |
Personal details | |
Born | 1948 (age 75–76) Omaha, Nebraska, U.S. |
Education | |
William P. Leahy SJ (born 1948)[citation needed] is an American Jesuit academic who served as the 25th president of Boston College, a post he had held since 1996, making him the longest serving president in the school's history.
Career
[edit]He joined the Society of Jesus in 1967, and is a member of the Jesuits' Midwest Province. Leahy earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy and a master's degree in United States history at Saint Louis University in 1972 and 1975, respectively. He then began studies at the Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley in Berkeley, California, where he earned degrees in theology (1978) and historical theology (1980). He was ordained a priest in 1978. He received a doctoral degree in U.S. history from Stanford University in 1986.
He began his academic career as a teacher at Campion High School in Wisconsin from 1973 to 1975. He served as a teaching assistant at Stanford in 1981 before joining the Marquette University faculty as an instructor of history in 1985. He became an associate professor with tenure in 1991, and in that same year became Marquette's executive vice president.[1]
Leahy's memberships include the American Catholic Historical Association, the American Historical Association, the History of Education Society, and the Organization of American Historians.
Boston College presidency
[edit]In 2006, after a two-year self-study involving more than 200 BC faculty, administrators, students and alumni, Leahy announced a $1.6-billion strategic plan that called for hiring 100 new faculty, adding a dozen new academic centers and spending $1 billion in construction and renovation projects to elevate Boston College to the highest echelon of premier national universities. The Plan set seven strategic directions for the University: To become a national leader in liberal arts education and student formation; to enhance its research initiatives in select natural sciences and in areas that address urgent social problems; to support leadership initiatives in BC's graduate and professional schools; to expand international programs and partnerships. Leahy's stated goal was to establish Boston College as "the world's leading Catholic university."[2]
In line with this direction, the Weston Jesuit School of Theology re-affiliated with Boston College in 2008 to form the new School of Theology and Ministry. During the same year, Leahy started the construction of Stokes Hall, a 183,000-square-foot (17,000 m2) administrative and classroom building for BC's humanities departments, which opened in 2012. In 2002, Leahy initiated the Church in the 21st Century program to examine issues facing the Roman Catholic Church in light of the clergy sexual abuse scandal.[3]
Published works
[edit]Books
[edit]- Adapting to America: Catholics, Jesuits and Higher Education in the Twentieth Century (Georgetown University Press, 1991)
Articles
[edit]Leahy has written a number of articles on Catholic higher education in the United States, including, among others:
- "The Rise of Laity in American Catholic Higher Education," Records of the American Catholic Historical Society (1991)
- "Academic Professionalism and American Catholic Higher Education," Assembly 1989: Jesuit Ministry in Higher Education (1990)
In addition, Leahy has authored numerous articles in the Dictionary of Christianity in America and book reviews in History, The Journal of American History, and History of Education Quarterly.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Boston College "Father William P. Leahy, S.J. twenty-fifth president of boston college"
- ^ "Boston College unveils 10-year, $1.6B expansion plan". SouthCoast Today. 4 December 2007. Retrieved 18 March 2017.
- ^ Lehigh, Scot (19 June 2002). "BC is leading the way on Church reform". Boston Globe Archives. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2017.
References
[edit]- "History - From the South End to Chestnut Hill". Retrieved January 27, 2008.
- 1948 births
- American education writers
- 20th-century American Jesuits
- 21st-century American Jesuits
- Presidents of Boston College
- Schoolteachers from Nebraska
- American historians
- Living people
- People from Fremont County, Iowa
- Writers from Omaha, Nebraska
- Saint Louis University alumni
- Stanford University alumni
- Catholics from Iowa
- Marquette University faculty