John Graham (policy analyst)

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Born1956 (age 6970)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
OccupationsProfessor, dean
John D. Graham
John D. Graham, former dean of the Indiana University O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs
Born1956 (age 6970)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
EducationWake Forest University (BA)
Duke University (MPP)
Carnegie Mellon University (PhD)
OccupationsProfessor, dean
EmployerIndiana University
Known forProponent of the use of cost benefit analysis in federal regulatory decision making.
SpouseSusan W. Graham
Websitehttps://spea.indiana.edu/faculty-research/directory/profiles/faculty/full-time/graham-john.html

John D. Graham is a former senior official in the George W. Bush administration and the former dean of the Indiana University O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs (formerly SPEA). Graham stepped down from the deanship to return to the O'Neill School faculty in the 2019 academic year.

John D. Graham was born in 1956 as the son of an accomplished steel industry executive,[1] and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

He earned his Bachelor of Arts in politics and economics at Wake Forest University in 1978, where he also won national awards as an intercollegiate debater. He earned his Master of Arts in public policy at Duke University in 1980 before serving as staff associate to Chairman Howard Raiffa's Committee on Risk and Decision Making of the National Research Council/National Academy of Sciences, (Washington, D.C.). He earned his doctorate in public policy at Carnegie Mellon University, and his doctoral dissertation on automobile safety, written at the Brookings Institution, was cited in pro-airbag decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1983 and by Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth Dole in 1985.[2]

Graham joined the Harvard School of Public Health as a post-doctoral fellow in 1983 and as an assistant professor in 1985. He taught methods of decision analysis and cost-benefit analysis to physicians, nurses, and other graduate students in public health. His prolific writings addressed both the analytic and institutional aspects of lifesaving policies. In 1991, at age 34, Graham earned tenure at Harvard.

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