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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Biography  



1.1  Early years  





1.2  Political career  





1.3  Academic career  





1.4  Death and legacy  







2 References  





3 Works  





4 Further reading  














Robert J. Alexander






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Robert Jackson Alexander (November 26, 1918 – April 27, 2010) was an American political activist, writer, and academic who spent most of his professional career at Rutgers University. He is best remembered for his pioneering studies on the trade union movement in Latin America and dissident communist political parties, including ground-breaking monographs on the International Communist Right Opposition, Maoism, and the international Trotskyist movement.

Biography[edit]

Early years[edit]

Robert J. Alexander was born in Canton, Ohio on November 26, 1918. His family moved to Leonia, New Jersey in 1922, when his father, Ralph S. Alexander accepted a teaching position at Columbia University.[1] Alexander graduated from the public high school in 1936 and matriculated at Columbia, receiving a B.A. in 1940 and a Master of Arts degree the following year. In 1936 Alexander took a senior trip to Spain, which sparked a lifelong interest in Hispanic cultures.[1]

Alexander was drafted in April 1942 into the United States Army Air Corps. He spent 25 months stationed in Great Britain, during which time he spent his off hours speaking to a number of British trade unionists, taking extensive notes of his conversations.[1] These discussions helped Alexander to refine an interview style of research which would later become a hallmark of his academic work.

After demobilization he began work for the State Department. While there, he received a grant from the Office of International Exchange of Persons of the State Department to work on his Ph.D. dissertation on labor relations in Chile, where he conducted hundreds of interviews in virtually all the major factories of the country.[1] He received his Ph.D. from Columbia in 1950.

Alexander was married to Joan O. Powell in 1949. The couple had two children.

Political career[edit]

Alexander was active in the socialist and trade union movements. In 1934, politicized by the Great Depression, Alexander joined the Young People's Socialist League, the youth section of the Socialist Party of America.[1] He continued organizing activities for YPSL while at Columbia and remained an active member of its parent group, the Socialist Party of America, serving as a member of its executive council 1957 to 1966.[1] When the Socialist Party changed its name in December 1972 to Social Democrats, USA (SDUSA), he maintained his membership until 1980; according to Perrone's biographical sketch, Alexander thought that SDUSA had become "too conservative".[1]

It was as a leader of the New Jersey YPSLs that he first met Jay Lovestone, then head of the Communist Party, Opposition. Alexander would later go on six missions to Latin America for Lovestone, first under the auspices of the Free Trade Union Committee, then under the direction of the AFL-CIO International Department.[2]

Alexander was a member of the board of directors of the Rand School of Social Science from 1952 until its closure in 1956.[1] He served on the League for Industrial Democracy's National Council and was an active member of Americans for Democratic Action and a delegate to several of its national conventions.[1]

During the 1950s, Alexander served as a consultant for the American Federation of Labor and AFL-CIO on the organized labor movement in Latin American and the Caribbean.[3] In 1961, he was named by president-elect John F. Kennedy to the Task Force on Latin America, which recommended the establishment of the Alliance for Progress.[3]

Alexander was also a lifelong member of the Council on Foreign Relations.[3]

Academic career[edit]

Alexander became an instructor at Rutgers while still in Chile in the late 1940s. He was promoted to assistant professor in 1950, associate professor in 1956, and full professor in 1961.

Although Alexander was a member of the Economics department at Rutgers, he was an interdisciplinary scholar, working extensively in the fields of political science and history.[3] Alexander was regarded as a champion of the principle of academic freedom and was a founder of the faculty union at Rutgers.[3] In 1963 Alexander achieved his "highest honor", the Order of the Condor of the Andes from the Bolivian government.[1]

Alexander was a founding member of the Middle Atlantic Council of Latin American Studies (MACLAS), and served as the group's president from 1987 to 1988.[3]

During his career, Alexander wrote and published extensively on Latin American politics and trade union movements, as well as surveys on dissident radical movements such as the Right Opposition, Trotskyism, and Maoism.

Alexander retired from Rutgers in 1989.

Death and legacy[edit]

Robert J. Alexander died April 27, 2010. He was 91 years old at the time of his death.

Alexander's voluminous papers are housed by the Special Collections and University Archives section of Rutgers University, located in New Brunswick, New Jersey. The collection includes 215 cubic feet (6,100 L) of material, which is housed off site.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Perrone, Fernanda. "Biographical Sketch of Robert J. Alexander". Inventory to the Papers of Robert Jackson Alexander. Rutgers University.
  • ^ Alexander, Robert J. (1981). The Right Opposition; The Lovestoneites and the International Communist Opposition of the 1930s. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. pp. x.
  • ^ a b c d e f "Robert J. Alexander". Home News Tribune. 19 June 2010.
  • ^ Perrone, Fernanda (April 2000). "Inventory to the Papers of Robert Jackson Alexander". Special Collections and University Archives. Rutgers University Libraries.
  • Works[edit]

    Further reading[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Robert_J._Alexander&oldid=1145141463"

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