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Peter Salovey to leave Yale presidency at end of academic year

As majority of Ivy League transitions after Covid, social psychologist leaves his decade-long tenure with financial strength and labour challenges

Published on
August 31, 2023
Last updated
August 31, 2023
Source: Yale University
Yale University President Peter Salovey

Yale University president Peter Salovey has decided to聽step down after more than a聽decade leading the Ivy League institution, leaving at a聽moment of聽financial strength and rising labour unrest.

鈥淭here is no perfect moment鈥 for a聽leadership transition, the 65-year-old social psychologist said in聽 to聽leave the presidency after the current academic year. 鈥淵et, I聽believe the best time to聽search for a聽new leader is聽when things are going well.鈥

Professor Salovey noted that Yale has made it through the Covid pandemic even stronger than it was, with a major fundraising campaign having reached $5聽billion (拢4聽billion) towards its $7聽billion goal.

After his June 2024 departure from the Yale presidency, Professor Salovey said he will return to a full-time position on the university faculty. His career accomplishments include creating one of the for understanding the concept of emotional intelligence.

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Much of US higher education 鈥 now including most of the Ivy League 鈥 has seen leadership transitions since the pandemic hit in early 2020, in a trend of increasingly shorter presidential tenures. Professor Salovey鈥檚 predecessor at Yale, Richard Levin, served 20聽years, also leaving at age聽65.

Yale, in announcing Dr Salovey鈥檚 decision, of accomplishments covering both teaching and research, including new campus construction, providing greater affordability for students at all levels, and acknowledging Yale鈥檚 historical ties to slavery.

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Joshua Bekenstein, an investment banker and Yale alumnus who serves as the senior trustee of the governing Yale Corporation, Professor Salovey for announcing his decision at a moment 鈥渨hen the university is in such a strong position financially, academically, and strategically鈥.

Yet Yale also faces the wave of labour dissatisfaction that is sweeping over much of US higher education. After decades of battling efforts by graduate student workers to unionise, the university relented in recent months and faces the prospect of long and contentious bargaining.

Professor Levin, an economist, had cited his success in concluding labour negotiations with university workers as a factor in the timing of his departure from the Yale presidency in 2013.

Professor Salovey said he told the Yale trustees that he would be willing to remain beyond next June if a successor is not found by then. He also expressed a willingness to help with university fundraising activities beyond his term in office at least as enthusiastically as he did while president.

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Yale has faced some controversy in that area, including a聽2021 incident in which Beverley Gage, a prominent professor of history and American studies at Yale, resigned over the university鈥檚 insistence that financial funders could guide its curriculum.

Professor Salovey was elevated to the presidency after serving Yale as provost from 2008 to 2013. He also had been dean of Yale College and dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. He earned undergraduate degrees in sociology and psychology from Stanford University, and three graduate degrees in psychology from Yale.

After leaving the presidency, Professor Salovey said in a note to the campus community, he plans 鈥渢o return to the Yale faculty, work on some long-delayed writing and research projects, and renew my love of teaching and working with students while continuing to help with fundraising鈥.

He made particular note of his wife, Marta Elisa Moret, and their meeting as graduate students at Yale, and thanked her for delaying her own retirement to help him in his presidential duties.

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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