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Professor and Regent

BRIEFS

Finally, a Seat at theTable

Undergraduate-turned-professor becomes the first UW regent from the faculty By Hannelore Sudermann

UW PHOTO

Alexes Harris brings the perfect mindset to her new role as a UW Regent. She is known for seeking “different opportunities to learn more about how a university works, how decisions are made and how to be informed.” For the first time, the UW Board of Regents has a voting faculty member in its ranks. In October, Gov. Jay Inslee, ’73, selected Professor Alexes Harris, ’97, to serve a three-year term on the University’s highest governing body.

UW faculty and others have long advocated to add a faculty member position to the boards at UW and Washington State University. Rep. Gerry Pollet, ’83, D-Seattle, the primary sponsor for the bill to create a faculty regent, pointed out that the state’s research universities are built upon a model of shared governance, but that “we have not fully shared governance.” What’s lacking is a voice for the teaching and research missions of the universities, he said in 2021, when he introduced the legislation.

The time is right, said Jake Vigdor, an economics professor who testified in support. The COVID-19 pandemic is leading to a time when universities will face existential threats to their financial viability. Those that survive and thrive will have to be nimble and responsive, he said. When a Board of Regents decision conflicts with the faculty’s stewardship, “we play a game of telephone,” he said, from chair to dean to provost to president to the regents. A faculty regent can provide “a direct line.”

Harris, a first-generation college student, grew up in Seattle just a few miles south of campus. She discovered her love of sociology as an undergraduate and pursued a doctorate in the field at UCLA. As a scholar, Harris researches issues of inequality, poverty and race in the U.S. systems of justice.

She joined the UW faculty in 2004 and became a full professor in 2016. In 2019, she became the faculty athletics representative, a position that helps ensure the athletics programs align with the educational mission of the University. In 2021, Harris became director of the faculty development program, which reports to the provost. “I seek different opportunities to learn more about how a university works, how decisions are made and how to be informed,” she says.

All of those things make her an ideal person to join the nine citizen regents and one student regent, says Gautham Reddy, chair of the Faculty Senate and vice chair for academic affairs and faculty development in the School of Medicine. “She brings the perspective of someone who has been here in many different roles—as a student, as a mentor, as a teacher and as a scholar.” But it’s important to remember that she is on the board to represent the people of Washington, he says.

PRESIDENT CAUCE HONORED BY NATIONAL ACADEMY OF MEDICINE

In late October, the National Academy of Medicine announced that UW President Ana Mari Cauce had been elected a member, one of the highest honors for a U.S. scientist in health and medicine.

The announcement praised Cauce’s leadership in public higher education administration as well as innovations in health research, education and service systems that enhance pathways for women and underrepresented groups. It also cited her efforts to address health equity, population health, climate change and her own pioneering research on behavioral health interventions, particularly with people of color.

In her decades as a professor of psychology and American ethnic studies, Cauce focused her research on adolescent development, particularly at-risk youth.

One of her major accomplishments as UW’s president has been to launch the Population Health Initiative. The effort engages students, staff and faculty to work across disciplines to improve the health of individuals, communities and the environment, and to promote social and economic equity.

CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY SAFETY

In September, the University announced a new Campus Community Safety division bringing together the UW Police Department, SafeCampus (a unit that helps students, faculty and staff prevent violence) and UW Emergency Management. This holistic approach is part of a longer-term effort to reimagine campus safety—including personal safety, crime prevention, crisis response and unarmed interventions.

As the UW administration works with faculty, staff and students to explore long-term changes in public safety work, division staff are concurrently working on immediate steps to ensure safety. In response to violence in the U District early this fall, for example, the division worked with the U District Partnership to provide security patrols in the neighborhood.