Warwick Sabin is publisher of the Oxford American magazine. In 2009 he was named to the FOLIO:40, a list of the 40 most influential people in the national magazine industry. [1]
Warwick Sabin was born in New York, NY. In 1993, he was chosen to represent New York State at Boys Nation, where he met President Bill Clinton in the White House Rose Garden 30 years to the day after Clinton, as the Arkansas delegate to Boys Nation, met President John F. Kennedy. [2] Sabin went on to attend the University of Arkansas, and graduated in 1998 summa cum laude as valedictorian with a degree in Political Science. He was also elected President of the student government, and during his tenure Sabin led a successful campaign to have all schools in the University of Arkansas System officially celebrate the federal holiday honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. [3]
In 1997 he won the Harry S. Truman Scholarship, and in 1998 he was named to the USA Today Academic All-Star Team and won the Marshall Scholarship for study at the University of Oxford. [4] While in England, Sabin was the speechwriter to U.S. Ambassador Philip Lader. During the summer of 1999, he was an intern at Foreign Affairs magazine. He left Oxford in June 2000 with an M.A. in Philosophy, Politics and Economics.
Sabin went from Oxford to Washington, D.C., where he was press secretary for U.S. Rep. Robert Marion Berry. In March 2002, he moved to Little Rock to accept the position of Director of Development for the William J. Clinton Foundation. [5] Two years later, Sabin became Associate Editor of the Arkansas Times, where he wrote cover stories and a weekly opinion column. [6] During this time, he co-hosted a program on Arkansas public television called "Unconventional Wisdom".
In 2007, he took the post of Associate Vice President for Communications at the University of Central Arkansas. [7] Early in 2008, he was appointed Publisher of the Oxford American after the magazine was the victim of an embezzlement. [8]
Sabin was named to the FOLIO:40 list in 2009 [9], and the Oxford American won the National Magazine Award for Video in 2011. [10]
He writes for the The Huffington Post [11] and serves on the board of directors for the Center for a Better South. [12]