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J. C. Hurewitz

Professor
Jacob Coleman Hurewitz
Born (1914-11-11)November 11, 1914
Hartford, Connecticut
Died May 16, 2008(2008-05-16) (aged 93)
Manhattan
Cause of death pneumonia
Education
Occupation Middle East scholar
Years active 1937–1984 and beyond
Employer
  • U.S. Government, Department of State, Washington, DC, senior political analyst, 1945–46
  • United Nations Secretariat, Lake Success, NY, political affairs officer, 1949–50
  • Columbia University, New York, NY
lecturer, 1950–52
assistant professor, 1952–54
associate professor, 1954–58
professor of government, beginning 1958
director, Columbia's Middle East Institute, beginning 1971
  • Consultant to
RAND Corp., 1962–70
Department of State, 1966–70
United States Department of Defense, 1970–74
Stanford Research Institute, 1971–75
American Broadcast Co. News, 1978–79
Notable work
  • "Diplomacy in the Near and Middle East" (Nostrand)
  • "The Middle East and North Africa in World Politics" (Yale)
  • "The Struggle for Palestine" (Norton, 1950)
Spouse(s) Miriam Freund (m.1946–2008)
Children
  • Barbara Aronson
  • Anne Rosenbloom
Parent(s) Isaac S. (a rabbi) and Ida Hurewitz
Awards
Social Science Research Council
American Council of Learned Societies
Notes

Jacob Coleman Hurewitz (November 11, 1914 – May 16, 2008) was a professor emeritus in the political science department at Columbia University.

Hurewitz graduated from Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut in 1936, then did his graduate work at Columbia, making what was then an unusual decision to concentrate on the Middle East. He worked for the Near East section of the Office of Strategic Services during World War II, then worked successively at the State Department, as a political adviser on Palestine to the President’s cabinet and for the United Nations secretariat. Professor Hurewitz began studying Middle Eastern politics in 1950, before the field had emerged as an academic discipline. From 1970 until 1984, Professor Hurewitz was director of the Columbia university's Middle East Institute, when he retired. In 1972, Hurewitz established the Columbia University Seminar on the Middle East, which he continued to chair until he was nearly 90.

His publications influenced many other historians. For example, William Roger Louis wrote in his book "The British Empire in the Middle East, 1945–1951" (Clarendon, 1984) that "my views on Arab nationalism and Zionism, and on the United States and the Middle East, have been influenced by the sensitive and dead-on-the-mark observations of J. C. Hurewitz."

Professor Emeritus J.C. Hurewitz, 93, died on May 16, 2008, of pneumonia.

The Hoover Institution Archives hold fourteen boxes of his papers.


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