Kevin V. Mulcahy

Kevin V. Mulcahy

Mulcahy in 2016
Education M.A. and Ph.D. Brown University
Occupation Endowed Professor

Kevin Vincent Mulcahy is the Sheldon Beychok Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Public Administration at Louisiana State University, where he has taught since 1980.

Background

Mulcahy earned master's degrees from both Brown University and Pennsylvania State University before completing his Ph.D. work at Brown. Before joining the faculty of Louisiana State University, Mulcahy taught at Claremont McKenna College, Mills College, Queens College-CUNY, and the University of Colorado.[1] Since joining the faculty of Louisiana State University in 1981, Mulcahy has developed the study of Cultural Politics within the framework of Public Policy and Public Administration.[2]

Scholarship

Mulcahy’s primary area of study focuses on cultural policy in the United States and abroad. Mulcahy has received an ATLAS (Award to Louisiana Artists and Scholars) grant for a new work tentatively titled Patronage, Politics and Cultural Policy: International Perspectives. The award committee enthusiastically endorsed his project, saying in part:

Dr. Mulcahy is uniquely qualified to undertake this study. His training is in public policy and administration with a special emphasis on foreign policymaking. He is well published. In addition, his narrative career account reveals that he has spent a lot of time in all sorts of countries working on international cultural policy in some form or another.
As presented in the proposal, the project is strongly conceived, defined, and organized. Noteworthy is Dr. Mulcahy’s enthusiasm for the project one gets the impression that this is a labor of love as well as a scholarly pursuit. As he describes his project in the proposal, it comes alive in the mind of the reader. This promises that his book will do the same.[3]

In his 1995 book, America’s Commitment to Culture, Dr. Mulcahy and co-editor Margaret J. Wyszomirski discuss the current state of arts funding in the U.S. and argue for a reorganization of the National Endowment for the Arts to include interdisciplinary panels for judging new grants in a system similar to that of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Prior to initiating his primary study of cultural policy, Mulcahy focused on American Foreign Policy, in the footsteps of his mentor Cecil V. Crabb. Mulcahy and Crabb coauthored two books on the subject: Presidents and Foreign Policy Making: FDR to Reagan (1986) and American National Security: A Presidential Perspective (1990).

Selected Books, Articles, and Book Chapters(1982-2012)

International Exchanges

Fulbright Activities

In 2002, Dr. Mulcahy was selected as the Fulbright Distinguished Professor of American Studies (The Laszlo Orszagh Chair) at the Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration. The Fulbright Program is a merit-based grant program that encourages academic exchanges between the United States and foreign countries. More recently in 2009, Mulcahy served as the Fulbright Senior Specialist in Cluj, Transylvania, Romania at Babeș-Bolyai University. For the 2010-2011 award period, he was selected to serve on the review committee for the Fulbright Senior Specialist where he worked to select American scholars for international assignments.[1]

Since the beginning of his career in 1970, Mulcahy has participated in over one hundred major professional meetings at home and abroad. Since 2007, his talks on culture have taken him across the United States and abroad to Athens, Greece; Jyvaskyla, Finland; Istanbul, Turkey; Quebec City, Quebec; Grenada, Spain; Kaohsiung and Taipei, Taiwan; and Haifa, Israel.[1]

Recent Activities

Service

Editorial

Since 1990, Dr. Mulcahy has served on the editorial board for the Journal of Arts Management, Law and Society, and has served as an Executive Editor for the journal since 1997. Additionally, he has also served as an editorial board member for the Journal of Pacific and Asian Studies since 2008. Below is a list of journal editions edited and introduced by Dr. Mulcahy.

Governmental

In the 1980s, Mulcahy took an active role in cultural politics at the Louisiana State Legislature. From 1980 to 1982, Mulcahy served as the Cultural Advisor to the Speaker of the Louisiana House of Representatives where he served as the National Endowment for the Humanities Humanist-in-Residence at the State Legislature. From 1982 to 1984, he served as Chairman of the Louisiana House of Representatives Arts Advisory Committee where he was tasked with coordinating three museums and three public agencies in placing artwork in the House of Representatives. He continued serving on the committee from 1987 to 1992.[1]

In 1990, Mulcahy testified to a U.S. presidential commission in opposition to the existing peer review system of assigning federal grants, asserting that as potential beneficiaries of other grants the peer reviewers have an automatic conflict of interest.[4][5] The National Endowment for the Arts later reorganized into four purpose-based categories, as opposed to the discipline-based system in place at the time.[6] The organization has since reverted to its pre-1995 structure.[7]

Academic

In addition to serving as a reviewer for Tenure and promotion decisions at several American universities, he assists the School of Management at the University of South Australia, Adelaide in reviewing Doctoral Dissertations and fulfilling the role of foreign reviewer.

At Louisiana State University, Professor Mulcahy currently serves as an undergraduate advisor in the Department of Political Science and sits on the Organizational Relief Fund committee in the Faculty Senate, where he helps to provide aid to deserving clubs on campus. He also serves the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research by serving on Committee on the Humanities Research and Development Group.

Mulcahy has a long history of service to the school and his students. He has served variously as President Emeritus, President, First Vice-President, and Member of the Arts and Sciences Faculty Senate. In addition, he served as a Faculty Friend for the LSU Honors College.[1]

Awards and Honors

In addition to the many awards and distinctions mentioned above, Mulcahy’s work in the fields of teaching and cultural politics has been recognized throughout his career. A select list of his honorariums not previously mentioned in this article is found below.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 , LSU Curriculum Vitae, Retrieved 8/20/11
  2. [ConnectCP, Cultural Policy Who's Who|http://www.connectcp.org/profiles/profile.php?profileid=649], Retrieved 8/20/11
  3. "ATLAS Report to the Final Panel" (PDF). Retrieved 13 September 2011.
  4. Honan, William H. (August 26, 1990), "There May Be Some Accounting For Taste After All", New York Times.
  5. Honan, William H. (February 27, 1992), "Behind Frohnmayer Losing an Arts Post", New York Times.
  6. ArtFax ArtFBI (PDF), October 1995, retrieved 2011-05-11
  7. NEA Organization Chart (PDF), 2010-06-24, retrieved 2011-05-12
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