Nancy Cantor is the 11th Chancellor and President of Syracuse
University, as well as Distinguished Professor of Psychology and
Women's Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences.
A native New Yorker, Dr. Cantor came to Syracuse from the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where she was chancellor.
She has held a variety of administrative positions encompassing all
aspects of a research university--from chair of the department of
psychology at Princeton to dean of the graduate school and then provost
and executive vice president for academic affairs at the University of
Michigan. She received her A.B. in 1974 from Sarah Lawrence College and
her Ph.D. in psychology in 1978 from Stanford University. Dr. Cantor is recognized for her scholarly contributions
to the understanding of how individuals perceive and think about their
social worlds, pursue personal goals, and how they regulate their
behavior to adapt to life's most challenging social environments. She
is co-author or co-editor of three books and author or co-author of
some 90 book chapters and journal articles. She has been an advocate for racial justice and for
diversity in higher education, and she has written and lectured widely
on these subjects. At the University of Michigan she was closely
involved in the university's defense of affirmative action in the cases
Grutter and Gratz, decided by the Supreme
Court in 2003. Cantor has also lectured and written extensively on liberal education and the creative campus.
Dr.
Cantor is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and is
a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of
Sciences. She has also received the Distinguished Scientific Award for
an Early Career Contribution to Psychology from the American
Psychological Association, and the Woman of Achievement Award from the
Anti-Defamation League. She is the past chair of the board of directors of the
American Association for Higher Education and is also a member of the
board of the American Council on Education. She serves on the board of
trustees of Sarah Lawrence College, the Center for Advanced Study in
the Behavioral Sciences, and the American Institutes for Research. She
has served as a member of the National Advisory Board of the National
Survey of Student Engagement and on various advisory boards and study
sections of the National Science Foundation and the National Research
Council, and a Congressional Commission on Military Training and
Gender-Related Issues. She is married to Steven R. Brechin, an environmental
sociologist and a professor in the Maxwell School and the College of
Arts and Sciences. They have two children, Maddy and Archie. |