ルース・シャクター・モーゲンソー | |
|---|---|
| 誕生 | ルース・シャクター 1931年1月26日 |
| 死去 | 2006年11月4日(75歳) |
| 出身校 | バーナード・カレッジオックスフォード政治学院 |
| 職業 | 教授 |
| 配偶者 | |
| 3人(クレイマーを含む) | 3 (including Kramer) |
Ruth Schachter Morgenthau (January 26, 1931 – November 4, 2006), was a professor of international politics at Brandeis University and an advisor to President Jimmy Carter on rural development in poor countries.
She was born in Vienna, Austria, on January 26, 1931, as Ruth Schachter. Her parents, Osias Schachter and Mizia (Kramer) Schachter, owned a textile importing company until they fled from the Nazis in 1940. She graduated from Barnard College in 1952, then attended the Institut d'Études Politiques in Paris as a Fulbright scholar. In 1958, she received a doctorate in politics from Oxford.
She was a member of the United States Mission to the United Nations, and in 1988 ran unsuccessfully as a Democratic candidate for Congress in Rhode Island.[1] She was an advocate of ''bottom-up'' aid to farmers and villagers in the third world and was a mentor to Nancy Hafkin who brought the internet connectivity to Africa.[2]
Ruth married to Henry Morgenthau in 1962. They had two sons: Henry (Ben) Morgenthau (born 1964) and cinematographerKramer Morgenthau (born 1966); and a daughter, Sarah Elinor Morgenthau Wessel (born 1963).[1][3][4]
She died on November 4, 2006, aged 75, in Boston, Massachusetts.[5]
In 1964, she wrote Political Parties in French-Speaking West Africa,[6] which won the 1965 Herskovitz Prize.[7]
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