Daniel Gitterman is Duncan MacRae ’09 and Rebecca Kyle MacRae Professor of Public Policy at UNC-Chapel Hill. He also serves as director of the Honors Seminar in Public Policy and Global Affairs (Washington, DC). At Carolina, he has received fellowships from the Institute of Arts and Humanities (Academic Leadership Program; Chairs Leadership Program) and the Global Research Institute (inaugural program “Globalization, the Economic Crisis and the Future of North Carolina“). He has received the Tanner Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching and the John L. Sanders Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching and Service at Carolina. Gitterman’s research interests include the American presidency and public policy; education and labor markets; American welfare state and politics of social and health policy; and globalization and labor standards.
Gitterman’s most recent book is “The Intersector: How the Public, Nonprofit, and Private Sectors Can Address America’s Challenges,” an edited volume exploring how cross-sector collaboration can solve seemingly intractable societal problems. Through reviews of the state of cross-sector collaborations and emerging practices, experts in the field show how cooperation among sectors is relevant to their core missions. Scholars from a wide range of disciplines discuss both the broad and specific concepts that advance understanding of cross-sector collaboration.
He is also the author of “Calling the Shots: The President, Executive Orders, and Public Policy” and “Boosting Paychecks: The Politics of Supporting America’s Working Poor.” All three books were published by Brookings Institution Press. He is co-author/editor (with Peter A. Coclanis) of “A Way Forward: Building a Globally Competitive South,“ published by the Global Research Institute and distributed as an e-book by UNC Press.
Gitterman received a B.A. from Connecticut College, an M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania and an A.M. and Ph.D. in political science from Brown University. Gitterman was an Exchange Scholar at the Harvard University Ph.D. program in health policy and completed a National Institute of Mental Health postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California, Berkeley.