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List of University of California, Santa Barbara faculty
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This article lists notable faculty (past and present) of the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Nobel laureates
Current faculty
- David Gross, Nobel Prize recipient, Physics, 2004[1]
- Alan Heeger, Nobel Prize recipient, Chemistry, 2000[1]
- Finn Kydland, Nobel Prize recipient, Economics, 2004[1]
- Shuji Nakamura, Nobel Prize recipient, Physics, 2014[1]
Former faculty
- Edward C. Prescott, Nobel Prize recipient, Economics, 2004[2]
- Walter Kohn, Nobel Prize recipient, Chemistry, 1998[1]
- Herbert Kroemer, Nobel Prize recipient, Physics, 2000[1]
- John Robert Schrieffer, Nobel Prize recipient, Physics, 1972[3]
- Frank Wilczek, Nobel Prize recipient, Physics, 2004[4]
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Pulitzer Prize
- Fredrik Logevall, Pulitzer Prize for History recipient, 2013
- N. Scott Momaday, Pulitzer Prize for Fiction recipient, 1969
- Jeffrey C. Stewart, Pulitzer Prize for Non-Fiction recipient, 2019
Anthropology
- James F. Brooks, historian, Native Americans
- Napoleon Chagnon, pioneer of biologically based interpretation of human reproductive and aggressive behavior[5]
- Brian Fagan[6]
- Garrett Hardin, Professor of Human Ecology from 1963 until his (nominal) retirement in 1978; most known for his papers "The Tragedy of the Commons" and "Lifeboat Ethics: the Case Against Helping the Poor"
- Stuart Tyson Smith, best known for his reconstruction of the ancient Egyptian language for the films Stargate and The Mummy[7]
- John Tooby, pioneer of evolutionary psychology[8]
Art
- Ann Bermingham, art historian
- Henri Dorra, art historian
- Kip Fulbeck[9]
- Gary Hugh Brown, Professor Emeritus of Art at UCSB (1966-2006)
Botany
Chemical engineering
Chemistry and biochemistry
- Thomas C. Bruice, coined the term "bio-organic chemistry", member of National Academy of Science[11]
- Craig Hawker[12]
- Bruce H. Lipshutz, professor, made significant contributions to copper catalyzed organic reactions[13]
- Ralph G. Pearson, Emeritus, coined the concepts of "hard" and "soft" for acids and bases[14][15]
- Galen D. Stucky, early researcher in the field of materials chemistry[16]
Chicano studies
Computer science
- Tao Yang[18]
- William Yang Wang, Mellichamp Professor of Mind and Machine Intelligence[19]
Counseling, clinical, and school psychology
- Shane R. Jimerson, 2003 co-recipient of the Lightner Witmer Award from the American Psychological Association; noted for his work in school psychology and traumatic stress[20]
- Tania Israel[21] expert in LGBTQ intervention research and dialogue across political disagreement
East Asian languages and cultural studies
Ecology, evolution, and marine biology
- Benjamin Halpern – marine biologist, ecologist, and 2016 A.G. Huntsman Award for Excellence in the Marine Sciences winner
- William W. Murdoch, population ecologist known for his research in population regulation and predator-prey relationships[23]
Electrical and computer engineering
English
- Hugh Kenner, literary critic
- Shirley Geok-lin Lim, poet and literary scholar
- Marvin Mudrick, literary scholar
Feminist studies
- Leila Rupp
- Jacqueline Bobo
- Tania Israel[21] expert in LGBTQ intervention research and dialogue across political disagreement
Film and media studies
Geography
- Reginald Golledge, pioneer in behavioral geography
- Michael Frank Goodchild, most known for work on GIS, or computer mapping[27]
- David Lopez-Carr
- Waldo R. Tobler, known for his first law of geography[28]
Geology
- Tanya Atwater, instrumental in the development of the theory of plate tectonics[29]
- Stanley Awramik
- Richard Virgil Fisher, volcanologist
- George R Tilton, pioneer in the measurement and application of isotopes to geology
Germanic, Slavic, and Semitic studies
Global and international studies
- Alison Brysk, Mellichamp Chair in Global Governance
- Mark Juergensmeyer
- Paul Orfalea, founder of the copy-chain Kinko's
History
- James F. Brooks, Professor of History and Anthropology, Native American history
- Alexander DeConde, Professor Emeritus of History, US diplomatic history
- Dimitrije Đorđević, late Professor of History, Modern Balkan History
- Mary O. Furner, Professor of History, 20th century US
- Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, Professor of History, Russian and Soviet history
- C. Warren Hollister, late Professor of History, Medieval Europe
- Immanuel C. Y. Hsu, late Professor of Chinese history
- Wilbur Jacobs, late Professor of History, Native American and Frontier History
- Nelson Lichtenstein, Professor of History, US Labor
- Albert Lindemann, Professor Emeritus of History, Modern European history
- Harold Marcuse, Associate Professor, Modern European history[30]
- Joachim Remak, late Professor of History, Modern European History
- W. Patrick McCray, Professor of History, History of Science
- David Rock, Professor Emeritus of History, Latin American history
- Jeffrey Burton Russell, Professor Emeritus of History, Medieval European history
- Paul Spickard, Professor of History, 20th-century US, world, and ethnic history
- Jeffrey C. Stewart an American Professor of Black Studies
Linguistics
Materials
Mathematics
- Michael G. Crandall, winner of the Leroy P. Steele Prize for Seminal Contribution to Research
- Glen Culler, early innovator in the development of the interactive computing and ARPAnet
- Yitang Zhang
Mechanical engineering
- Henry T. Yang, Chancellor[33]
Media arts and technology
Molecular and cellular biology
- Jamey Marth, molecular and cellular biologist, Director of the Center for Nanomedicine, professor in the Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology
Music
- Julia Banzi, Ph.D. Ethnomusicology, member of the Al-Andalus Ensemble,[35] expert on Andalusian music and women's ensembles of the Arab world
- John Dearman, Grammy Award-winning classical guitarist, member of the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet (LAGQ), Director of Guitar Studies
- Alejandro Planchart, Emeritus, professor of musicology, expert on Guillaume Dufay
Philosophy
Physics
- David Awschalom, best known for his work in spintronics in semiconductors[38]
- James Hartle, together with Stephen Hawking, proposed the Hartle-Hawking wavefunction of the universe, a specific solution to the Wheeler-deWitt equation meant to explain the initial conditions of the Big Bang cosmology[39]
- James S. Langer
- Joseph Polchinski[40]
Political science
- M. Kent Jennings, one of the founding fathers of political socialization research and theory.
- Benjamin Cohen, leading scholar in the field of international political economy
- Leah Stokes, political scientist specializing in environmental policy
Psychological and brain sciences
- Daphne Bugental, psychologist known for her research on parent-child relationships, infant and child maltreatment, and family violence
- Leda Cosmides, helped pioneer the field of evolutionary psychology[41]
- Michael Gazzaniga, pioneer of cognitive neuroscience[42]
Religious studies
Sociology
See also
References
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