[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 84 (Wednesday, June 6, 2012)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E999]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING DR. MATTHEW HOLDEN, ACADEMICIAN
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HON. BENNIE G. THOMPSON
of mississippi
in the house of representatives
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Mr. THOMPSON of Mississippi. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor and
acknowledge Dr. Matthew Holden, Academician.
Holden was born in Mound Bayou, Mississippi and subsequently grew up
in Chicago. He is married to the former Dorothy Amanda Howard and they
are the parents of Paul Christopher Hendricks and John Matthew
Alexander Holden. Holden is an alumnus of Northwestern University
(M.A., Ph.D., Political Science, Anthropology minor), of Roosevelt
University (B. A., Political Science, History minor), and of Wendell
Phillips High School (Chicago).
He taught at Wayne State University in Detroit, the University of
Pittsburgh, the University of Wisconsin--Madison, and the University of
Virginia, where he was the Henry L. and Grace M. Doherty Professor of
Politics. He has also been the Newman Visiting Professor of American
Civilization, Cornell University, and has been a visiting professor at
Jackson State University. In his writings and experience, Holden has
emphasized the connection of political science concepts to the actual
world that they seek to explain, and of learning from the actual world
to refine concepts.
Professor Holden has written extensively in many fields of the
discipline of political science. This work has included energy politics
and environmental policy, regulatory policy and practice, urban and
metropolitan politics, public policy and administration, executive
politics, law and politics, and race and ethnic politics.
Among his works are Continuity & Disruption: Essays in Public
Administration, a study of race and politics entitled The Divisible
Republic, an edited volume on Varieties of Political Conservatism, and
contributions to a joint volume on Resources and Decisions.
He is also the author of a new volume, now in the last stage of
writing, entitled The Practice of Power, a study of public
administration and political power, for the University of Oklahoma
Press. This volume is based on the Rothbaum Lecture in Representative
Government delivered in 2001 and rewritten over the past decade. In
1973, he published a two volume perspective on race relations and civil
rights entitled The Politics of the Black ``Nation'' and The White
Man's Burden. A combined trade edition was also published under the
title The Divisible Republic.
He has also been engaged in many activities outside the academy. He
held full time appointive public office as Commissioner of the Public
Service Commission of Wisconsin and as Commissioner of the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission. He has been a member of the Electricity
Advisory Board (U.S. Department of Energy), Task Force on Electric
System Reliability (U.S. Department of Energy), President's Air Quality
Advisory Board, and of the Board of Directors of Atlantic Energy, Inc.
Among his public affairs activities have been assignments in
congressional testimony on D.C., government organization and on energy
policy, and as a witness before the House Judiciary Committee on
historical and constitutional standards on Presidential impeachment. He
has also been a witness on state legislative hearings on energy.
He has also been a member of the Delegate Assembly of the National
Urban League, the Education and Youth Incentives Committee of the
National Urban League, the Boards of Directors of the Madison,
Wisconsin and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Urban Leagues, in local NAACP
chapters, and is an active lay-person in the Episcopal Church.
He has also been a strong advocate for improving the analytical basis
of African American politics, and has spent recent years advancing the
concept of a think tank on politics, economics, and government,
especially in the Lower Mississippi Valley. One of his major current
interests, as well, is historic preservation, especially in Mound Bayou
where the vicissitudes of the contemporary economy are severe and
adverse effects.
He is a former President of the American Political Science
Association, a former President of the Policy Studies Organization, a
Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a Senior
Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration. He holds the
LLD. (Hon.) from Tuskegee University, the L.H.D. (Hon.) from Roosevelt
University, and the L.H.D. (Hon.) from Virginia Theological Seminary.
Holden has recently become a member of the Board of the Abraham Lincoln
Association.
Jackson State University has also created a Matthew Holden, Jr.
Symposium Lecture in recognition of his work and of his and Mrs.
Dorothy Holden's donation of the 4,000 volume library that is now
called The Mrs. Dorothy Howard Holden and Dr. Matthew Holden, Jr.
Reading Room. Holden's academic, personal, and official papers have
mainly been donated to the University of Virginia Archives. When those
papers are processed they will provide one of most extensive
collections in any university of materials on regulatory policy and
procedure as seen from a commissioner's standpoint.
Holden served in the United States Army, with sixteen months in Korea
in the 7th Infantry Division Artillery.
Matthew Holden, Jr. is the Wepner Distinguished Professor in
Political Science, University of Illinois--Springfield, a position he
has held since August 2009. He is the convener of the Wepner Symposium
on the Lincoln Legacy and Contemporary Scholarship.
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