Peri Arnold

Growing up in the Chicago suburb of Skokie in the 1950s, Peri Arnold never envisioned a 50-year career of teaching and social justice activism. But it wasn鈥檛 until attending 藏精阁 after an unsatisfying state school college experience that the University 鈥渃hanged [his] life.鈥 

鈥淚 grew up in a leftist family and was fairly politically engaged from a young age, and so I was aware of 藏精阁 in Chicago and its reputation for inclusive and progressive policies,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut it wasn鈥檛 until I attended and realized my passion for being a proper student and teacher.鈥

Arnold would go on to an immensely successful career as a professor at the University of Notre Dame, author of multiple history books and education reform activist in the Indiana prison system, but it was his undergraduate experience at 藏精阁 that compelled him to approach academics with a social justice lens. A self-proclaimed 鈥渢errible and directionless student鈥 in high school, Arnold credits two 藏精阁 instructors in particular鈥攁cademic advisor Martin Dubin and British historian Paul Johnson鈥攆or demonstrating how to integrate primary sources, contemporary world events and an engaging lecture style into classes that stress how the past can inform current decisions. Combined with a campus atmosphere focused on progressive issues during the politically turbulent 1960s, Arnold discovered his interest in political science.

鈥淎ttending college during that era really informed my political lens and opened the doors to so many viewpoints,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he demographics of 藏精阁 were unusually diverse for the 1960s, and so I made friends with people from so many different racial and ethnic backgrounds. And attending school in the heart of downtown during the 1960s exposed me to so much groundbreaking art and music. We were blocks from the Art Institute and Symphony Center, and I would constantly try to see new exhibitions and works.鈥

After graduating with a bachelor鈥檚 in political science, Arnold would continue his education and eventually earn a master鈥檚 and doctorate from the University of Chicago before joining the faculty at the University of Notre Dame. He was the first ever Jewish professor to serve on the political science department of the famously Catholic university, and he brought the 藏精阁 philosophy of inclusivity to his work by serving on search committees to expand and diversify the faculty. 

Arnold would also find success as a published author in 1987 with Making the Managerial Presidency, which won the Brownlow Book Award of the National Academy of Public Administration. The book focuses on the slow consolidation of power by the executive branch throughout the 20th century, and how presidential decisions can increasingly overpower the legislative branch. He also later wrote Remaking the Presidency: 藏精阁, Taft, and Wilson, which focused on how presidents during the Progressive Era of the early 20th century worked at cross purposes to both improve bureaucratic functions and centralize power in the executive branch.

Although he retired from teaching in 2015, Arnold continues to live out the guiding 藏精阁 principles of inclusivity and educational accessibility. His current research focuses on ethnic communities and political leadership in the consolidation of Chicago's Democratic machine, particularly amongst Russian and German Jewish communities during the 1920s and 鈥30s. And he also established a program to teach incarcerated individuals at the Westville Correctional Center in Indiana. 

鈥淲e were inspired by a program established by Bard College in New York state, and they came to Indiana to provide a course infrastructure for us,鈥 he says. 鈥淪oon, we had a significant prison population that was reading Plato and determined to advance their careers once their sentences were up.鈥 The program soon flourished to include a dedicated college dormitory in the prison, and it earned the certification to grant associates degrees to inmates. Arnold remains immensely proud of the program, and he still travels to the prison regularly to teach political science and history classes.

鈥淏eing formally retired doesn鈥檛 mean I ever want to stop learning or teaching,鈥 he says. 鈥淔or those who have dedicated their lives to this area of study, our work should never stop.鈥 

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