Avery Leiserson Papers
Scope and Content Note
This collection is 3.34 linear feet, 8 Hollinger boxes which consist of correspondence, articles and book reviews by Avery Leiserson as well as materials relating to his academic career at the University of Chicago (1946 -1952) and at Vanderbilt University (1952 -1978). Other series in this collection include reprints, book reviews, magazine and newspaper articles written by others. The materials cover the years 1936 until his death in 2004.
Dates
- 1936-2004
Language of Materials
English
Biographical Note
Avery Leiserson was born in 1913 and died February 14, 2004 at the age of 90. He was a native of Madison, Wisconsin. He graduated from the University of Illinois in 1934 with a B.A. degree and in 1941 from the University of Chicago with a Ph.D in Political Science. Early in his career and before the second World War he taught briefly at Princeton University. Then from 1946 until he came to Vanderbilt University in 1952, he taught at the University of Chicago. He was at Vanderbilt until his retirement as Professor Emeritus in 1978. He was a nationally known scholar of American politics who was instrumental in building Vanderbilt’s Political Science department to a position of national prominence.
Professor Leiserson’s great mentor and influence was Charles E. Merriam. In an introduction to a program in 1975 of the American Political Science Asssociation of which Professor Leiserson was president at the time, Samuel Patterson introduced Avery Leiserson as one of the most important leaders in the field of Political Science and noted especially his seminal work “Problems of Methodology in Political Research.” Avery Leiserson is known in addition to his work on methodology in political science “for his concern about values, his devotion to scientific inquiry, and his emphasis on realism all of which were guided by his sense of the value of democracy.”
In the 1960’s Professor Leiserson was active in Civil Rights work, and he was one of a group of Vanderbilt professors who first proposed a Black Studies Program in the College of Arts and Science, which later became the African American Studies Program.
Professor Leiserson was honored with the Harvie Branscomb Distinquished Service Award in 1967 and with an “Avery Leiserson Day” on November 1, 2003 to recognize his many accomplishments during his long life and career.
His published books include:
Administrative Regulation: A Study of Representation of Interests (1942)
Parties and Politics: An Institutional and Behavioral Approach (1958)
The American South in the 1960’s (1964)
With these contributions to others:
Perspectives on the South: Agenda for Research (1967)
Political Research and Political Theory (1968)
Leiserson served as editor of the Journal of Politics and as book review editor of The American Political Science Review.
Extent
3.34 Linear Feet
Physical Location
Offsite Storage, Special Collections & Archives
- Title
- Finding Aid for the Avery Leiserson Papers
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Molly Dohrmann
- Date
- February 2008
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Vanderbilt University Special Collections Repository
Special Collections Library
1101 19th Ave. S.
Nashville TN 37212 United States
specialcollections@vanderbilt.edu