Harvard Keeps Alan Garber as President Through Mid-2027

Harvard University will keep Alan Garber as its president until mid-2027, giving him another three years in the job after he took over as interim leader when Claudine Gay resigned in January.
Bloomberg
Published3 Aug 2024, 12:04 AM IST
Harvard Keeps Alan Garber as President Through Mid-2027
(Bloomberg) -- Harvard University will keep Alan Garber as its president until mid-2027, giving him another three years in the job after he took over as interim leader when Claudine Gay resigned in January.
A “full-scale search for his eventual successor” will start in the late spring or early summer of 2026, Harvard said in a statement Friday. Garber, a 69-year-old physician and economist, had previously served as university provost at the oldest and richest US college. 
Garber became interim president as student protests sparked by the Israel-Hamas war roiled campuses nationwide. Gay and the president of the University of Pennsylvania resigned after giving disastrous testimony before Congress last year about antisemitism on their campuses, and Harvard still faces probes on the subject from two congressional committees. Major donors including alumni Ken Griffin and Len Blavatnik have said they’re pausing gifts to the school. 
“Alan has done an outstanding job leading Harvard through extraordinary challenges since taking on his interim presidential duties seven months ago,” Penny Pritzker, who leads Harvard Corp., said in the statement. 
“We have asked him to hold the title of president, not just interim president, both to recognize his distinguished service to the university and to underscore our belief that this is a time not merely for steady stewardship but for active, engaged leadership,” she said.
‘Excellence’ Focus 
In a separate statement, Garber vowed to focus on “rededicating ourselves to academic excellence” and the ways in which Harvard’s teaching and research can benefit the broader society. 
“That excellence is made possible by the free exchange of ideas, open inquiry, creativity, empathy, and constructive dialogue among people with diverse backgrounds and views,” he said. “This is a challenging time, one of strong passions and strained bonds among us.”