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American political scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aaron Belkin (born March 12, 1966) is a political scientist, researcher and professor. He currently teaches political science at San Francisco State University and was the director of the Palm Center, a think tank that commissioned and disseminated research on gender, sexuality and the military.[1]
Aaron Belkin | |
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Academic background | |
Alma mater | Brown University University of California Berkeley |
Academic work | |
Main interests | Policy research, gender, sexuality and the military |
In 2011, he was a grand marshal in San Francisco's LGBT Pride Parade.[2]
Belkin received his bachelor's degree from Brown University in international relations in 1988. He then went to the University of California Berkeley where he got a master's and PhD in political science.[3] He is a graduate of Hawken School in Gates Mills, Ohio, where he was a friend and the prom date of LGBT activist Roberta A. Kaplan.[4]
Belkin taught as an associate professor at University of California Santa Barbara from 1998 to 2009, while also teaching psychology at Hunter College between 2005 and 2006. While at Santa Barbara, he became the founding director of one of 14 original research centers at the Institute for Social, Behavioral, and Economic Research at UCSB. This center was eventually renamed the Palm Center in memory of Michael D. Palm[5] and remained closely connected to the UC system even after it became an independent non-profit.[6]
At the Palm Center, Belkin has focused on new ways for social science research to convince public opinion. Most notably, he turned this attention to the campaign to repeal the military's don't ask, don't tell, or "DADT" policy. His 2011 book How We Won outlines these strategies and shows how building public support to end DADT in turn, made it an issue that politicians had to spend less political capital to address. Belkin claimed that the research and evidence always indicated that ending DADT would not in any way destabilize the military, but building a critical mass of public and political support took over a decade of focused action.[7]
After the success of the campaign to repeal DADT, he turned his attention to engaging in a national policy conversation on "military service by transgender personnel".[8][9]
In addition to his books, Belkin regularly blogs for the Huffington Post.[10]
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