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Robert E. Lane


Robert E. Lane is an American political scientist and political psychologist. He is the Eugene Meyer Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Yale University. Lane taught there for nearly 50 years; during that time, he twice headed the department and helped lead the shift towards behavioralism.

Lane is a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy (1995) as well as the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

He was a past President of the American Political Science Association, as well as of the International Society of Political Psychology. He was also a Research Associate at Yale's Institution for Social and Policy Studies, and has been a visiting scholar at Oxford and Cambridge Universities, the London School of Economics, and the Australian National University, among others.

Books of Professor Lane's have been translated into Swedish, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese, and Hungarian (and portions of books into French and Chinese).Political Ideology received the Philip Converse Book Award in 2008. Since 1994, the American Political Science Association has given the Robert E. Lane Award for the best book in political psychology published in the past year, which his own book - The Loss of Happiness in Market Democracies - received in 2001.

Lane describes his research as having been organized around seven questions:

Lane led a lifetime of self-described "timid" activism: as an adolescent, as a college and graduate student at Harvard University, as a professor at Yale and as a retiree (a colleague likening him to the image of "the Hollywood version of a tireless professor"). He was the President of the American Student Union, as well as its Harvard chapter, during which time he helped organize the first union for waitresses and busboys (challenging the University Treasurer in the process). He organized the Harvard Student Refugee Committee to convince Harvard to offer scholarships to hundreds of student refugees following Kristallnacht (commended in a letter by President Franklin D. Roosevelt for his efforts, and with NY Times coverage yielding further attention and donations); he extended this to countries nationwide through the Intercollegiate Committee to Aid Student Refugees and with support from the Warburg family of bankers.


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