Jennifer Gandhi Appointed Dean of Faculty Development

Yale University

Jennifer Gandhi, a scholar of comparative politics and political economy and deputy dean of Yale's Jackson School of Global Affairs, has been named the Phyllis A. Wallace Dean of Faculty Development in Yale's Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), FAS Dean Steven Wilkinson announced today in a message to the Yale community.

Gandhi will begin a five-year term on Jan. 1, 2027.

She will succeed Larry Gladney, a professor of physics in the FAS and the FAS dean of science, who was the Phyllis A. Wallace Dean of Faculty Development from January 2019 through June 2025. Gladney will retire from the Yale faculty at the end of the 2026 calendar year.

Gandhi, who is the Howard Wang '95 Professor of Global Affairs and Political Science, joined Yale in 2022 from Emory University, where she chaired the Department of Political Science. Since 2024, she has served as deputy dean in the Jackson School, where she has overseen admissions, the undergraduate and graduate curriculum, and student affairs. She has also chaired or served on numerous search committees for the FAS, often for joint appointments in the Jackson School.

In addition, Gandhi has chaired the Yale Scholars at Risk Committee since 2023, overseeing the process for bringing scholars seeking refuge from political persecution to Yale, and currently serves on the Executive Committee of the Jackson School.

"I am excited that Jen has agreed to take on this multi-faceted new role. She'll bring a wealth of leadership experience and good judgment to the position," wrote Wilkinson in his message to the community.

In her new role, Gandhi will lead and expand a number of FAS dean's office initiatives focused on faculty well-being, including the FAS's existing Scholars as Leaders; Scholars as Learners (SAL2) program - which provides faculty with professional coaching support, leadership development opportunities, and other community building and professional development programming.

Gandhi will lead special projects related to faculty well-being and development, examine how peer institutions support their faculty, and explore how the FAS can help its faculty grow throughout their careers at Yale. She will also oversee training for FAS department and program chairs, faculty leaders, and FAS faculty at large, and will lead elements of the FAS faculty search process and training for departments and search committees.

"In my role at the Jackson School, I have learned a great deal and have enjoyed working with colleagues there," Gandhi said. "I see this new role within FAS as a great opportunity to learn more about another part of Yale and to think hard about how we can best support faculty in their commitments as researchers, but also as teachers, mentors, and leaders."

Gandhi's scholarly research focuses on authoritarian regimes and transitions to and from democracy. She is the author of the award-winning book, "Political Institutions Under Dictatorship" (Cambridge University Press, 2009), and has conducted recent research addressing transitional justice and human rights, particularly in Argentina. Her work demonstrates how autocratic regimes use political institutions to consolidate power and how opposition parties challenge autocratic incumbents. Her scholarship spans the globe, drawing on examples and data from across Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Her current projects focus on the electoral strategy of the opposition in dictatorships and backsliding democracies and how autocratic governments transform the built environment of cities in order to stabilize their rule.

She also serves as an associate editor for the Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy and on the editorial board of journals including the American Journal of Political Science, British Journal of Political Science, Comparative Political Studies, and the European Political Science Review.

In 2025, Gandhi was named the Howard Wang '95 Professor of Global Affairs and Political Science and elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Gandhi is also a frequent speaker on authoritarianism and political science. She was invited to deliver keynote addresses at the University of Helsinki's "Resisting Authoritarianism" conference, in October 2024, and at the New Advances in the Political Economy of Development in Eurasia conference at Almaty Management University in Kazakhstan, in 2025.

At Yale, she teaches courses in Political Science and in Global Affairs on topics including political institutions, comparative politics, and dictatorships.

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