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PAUL LOEB--BIOGRAPHY
Paul Loeb has spent over thirty years researching and writing about citizen responsibility
and empowerment--asking what makes some people choose lives of social commitment, while
others abstain.
He has written five widely praised books, lectured to enthusiastic
responses at 400 colleges and universities around the country--including Harvard,
Stanford, Dartmouth, Chicago, Michigan, MIT, Yale, Cornell, Duke, Wisconsin, and
Columbia--and been a lead speaker at numerous conferences including the National Education
Association, American Society on Aging, Education Commission of the States, National Youth
Leadership Council, American College Personnel Association, Campus Compacts
Presidential Summit, the American Association of Colleges & Universities, a national conference on race and ethnicity on campus, the company
meeting of Patagonia Corp., and the Unitarian General Assembly. His January 2002
talk to the annual provost’s conference of the American Association of
State Colleges & Universities inspired the Association’s American
Democracy project, now involving 200 campuses.
Born in California in l952, Loeb attended
Stanford University and New York's New School for Social Research, and
worked in both places to end the Vietnam War. Loeb has
written for a range of publications including the New York Times, Washington Post,
USA Today, Los
Angeles Times, Boston Globe, Psychology Today, Christian Science Monitor, Chronicle of
Higher Education, The Nation, Village Voice, Utne Reader,
Redbook, Parents Magazine, Mother Jones, Sojourners, Technology Review, Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
Baltimore Sun, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Detroit News, San Francisco
Chronicle, St Louis Post-Dispatch, Tampa Tribune, Academe, New Age Journal, National Catholic Reporter, Teaching
Tolerance, Salon, International Herald Tribune, and Knight-Ridder News Service.
Loeb's first book, NUCLEAR CULTURE (New Society Publishers), explored
the daily world of atomic weapons workers in Hanford, Washington. HOPE IN
HARD TIMES (Lexington Books) examined the lives and visions of ordinary
Americans involved in grass roots peace activism. GENERATION AT THE
CROSSROADS: APATHY AND ACTION ON THE AMERICAN CAMPUS (Rutgers University
Press) explored the values and choices of American college students. SOUL
OF A CITIZEN: LIVING WITH CONVICTION IN A CYNICAL TIME (St Martin's
Press), looks at what it takes to lead lives of social commitment despite
all the obstacles, and now has 95,000 copies in print through twelve printings.
His new
anthology on political hope, The Impossible Will Take a Little While,
was published in 2004 by Basic Books named the #3 political book of that
year by the History Channel and the American Book Association, and won the
Nautilus Award for best social change book of the year. It now has 60,000
in print.
Because Loeb's work offers uniquely intimate perspectives on the fundamental questions of our
time, it has sparked widespread attention. His writing has been covered by the
Associated Press and United Press International, cited in Congressional debates, and
praised, quoted, and discussed in an array of publications including the New York Times,
Washington Post, Time, Newsweek, The Economist, Los Angeles Times, Harper's, New York
Review of Books, Christian Science Monitor, Psychology Today, The Oprah
magazine, Parents Magazine, Chicago
Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times, London Sunday Times, Manchester Guardian, Family Circle,
Chronicle of Higher Education, USA Weekend, Teen, Modern Maturity, Newsday, Atlanta
Journal Constitution, Detroit Free Press, Dallas Morning News, San Francisco Chronicle,
Columbus Dispatch, Boston Herald, New Age, Christian Century, Commonweal, Teacher
Magazine, Sojourners, Progressive, Houston Chronicle, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Philadelphia
Inquirer, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Orlando Sentinel, Charlotte Observer, Seattle Times,
Greenpeace, Toronto Globe and Mail, Daily Age [of Melbourne, Australia], Baltimore Sun,
Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Rocky Mountain News, Mother Jones, Academe, Contemporary
Sociology, National Catholic Reporter, and the Atlantic.
An Affiliate Scholar at Seattle's
Center for Ethical Leadership, Loeb has also done
over 1,000 TV and radio interviews, including nationwide appearances on TV networks like
NBC, CNN, PBS, Fox, and C-Span, National Public
Radio, the BBC, the ABC, NBC, and CBS radio networks, American Urban
Radio, and national German, Australian, and
Canadian radio.
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