Cornelius M. Kerwin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cornelius M. "Neil" Kerwin (born 1949) is an American educator in public administration and is the acting president of American University.
A 1971 undergraduate alumnus of American University, Kerwin continued his education with a Master of Arts degree in political science from the University of Rhode Island in 1973. In 1975, Kerwin returned to his alma mater and joined the faculty of the School of Public Affairs, then the School of Government and Public Administration. Kerwin completed his doctorate in political science from Johns Hopkins University in 1978 and continued to teach until 1989, when he became the dean of the school.
He continued in that post until 1997, when he was named the university's provost. During his tenure as provost, Kerwin oversaw a number of major changes including the tightening of graduate and doctoral programs, the foundation of the University College Program, and comprehensive reviews and overhauls of the General Education Program, University Honors Program and academic advising. Kerwin put his understanding of policy implementation to use in executing segments of then-University President Benjamin Ladner's 15-Point Plan, including the establishment of a new faculty senate.
Following the American University Board of Trustees' decision to suspend Ladner on August 25, 2005, Kerwin was named Interim President. He held that post through the Board's investigation and subsequent removal of Ladner, and will continue to hold the position until a new president is named. Kerwin is the first American University alumnus to serve as its University President.
Kerwin's academic work focuses on public policy, administrative and regulatory processes and implementation and American government. He is the author of Rulemaking: How Government Agencies Write Law and Make Policy and coauthor of How Washington Works: The Executive's Guide to Government.