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According to the Harvard Corp., Garber will serve as president “until a new leader for Harvard is identified and takes office.”
Alan M. Garber, an economist and physician who is Harvard University’s provost and chief academic officer, will now serve as its interim president.
The Harvard Corp. described Garber as “a distinguished and wide-ranging scholar” in a statement on Tuesday. “We are fortunate to have someone of Alan’s broad and deep experience, incisive judgment, collaborative style, and extraordinary institutional knowledge to carry forward key priorities and to guide the university through this interim period,” the corporation said.
Garber, who was appointed provost in 2011, has a doctorate in economics from Harvard and a medical degree from Stanford. He is a member of the Association of American Physicians, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Medicine.
Lawrence H. Summers, a former Harvard president and former Treasury secretary, said in an email that Garber, “who is universally liked, admired, and respected, is a superb choice as interim president.”
In an interview with The Harvard Crimson in November, Garber said that he regretted the university’s initial statement in response to the war in Israel and the Gaza Strip. The statement was denounced by politicians, academics and Jewish groups who said that it did not condemn Hamas strongly enough, and he spoke positively about a more forceful statement that followed from Harvard President Claudine Gay, which condemned Hamas for “terrorist atrocities.”
Garber added that the crisis over the university’s response to the war has been the most serious that Harvard has faced during his tenure as provost.
“The community was immediately divided, and that is not true of every crisis that we face,” he told The Crimson. “It is a combustible situation, and one in which many people are grieving.”
Garber was reportedly considered a contender to become Harvard’s 29th president, but in 2018 the post went to Lawrence S. Bacow. In 2022, Garber told the Crimson that he was “very happy” serving as the provost, and last year Gay became the university’s 30th president.
According to the Harvard Corp., Garber will serve as president “until a new leader for Harvard is identified and takes office.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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