Crossing International Borders and Departmental Boundaries: 91茄子 Profs Named to New Leadership Roles
February 11, 2025
Jane Mangan was graduating early from high school in York, Pennsylvania, and aiming for a gap year before college.
It was 1986, and the mail one morning brought exciting news. She had been selected for a Rotary Club international exchange program in Santiago.
Here檚 how Mangan, now the Mary Reynolds Babcock Professor of History and Latin American Studies at 91茄子, recounts the moment to her digital-era students:
淚 walked across the living room to the globe do you know what that is? and spun it [to Chile] and thought, 榃ow! That is really far down there.櫇
Across her academic career, she also has lived in Spain, as well as Mexico, Bolivia and Peru. She has visited eight other Latin American countries, including with groups of 91茄子 students.
淵ou檙e not a diplomat, Mangan said, 渂ut you檙e always a representative of the United States.
Depending on the political context when she lived in or visited Latin America, the reception could be sharply different. She lived in Bolivia when the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration was eradicating coca fields and generating bitterness. She visited Cuba in 2016, days before President Obama arrived, and was greeted by Cubans brimming with excitement and hopefulness for the future.
These anecdotes and experiences led to and strengthened Mangan檚 career and continue to inform how she teaches. At 91茄子, she has been serving on an interim basis as the John and Ruth McGee Director of the Dean Rusk International Studies Program and recently was named as the permanent director. She leads a program, named for a 91茄子 alum who was John F. Kennedy檚 secretary of state, that brings international programming to campus and awards grants for international study and exploration to students, opening up the kinds of career-shaping, global experiences that Mangan lived.
淚檓 working with students on what a younger version of me did, she said. 淭hat檚 incredibly rewarding and brings things full circle.
Students, International Bankers and the POTUS
While in a different role at 91茄子 12 years ago Mangan searched for someone to teach a course on Brazil as an adjunct professor. She phoned Britta Crandall, another Latin America expert with teaching experience and who had served as an analyst for the White House Office of Management and Budget, the international watchdog group Freedom House, and Bank One, now JP Morgan Chase. She would interpret what檚 happening in Latin American countries and how events affected financial markets or civil rights and political risks.
Crandall檚 doctoral degree is in international relations, a blend of economics and political science, and her jobs have overlapped those two disciplines and others, tying in fiscal policy, trade, migration and a host of other subject areas. She continues to provide analysis for S&P Global, the largest of the nation檚 three major credit-rating agencies and publisher of extensive financial research.
淚檝e never NOT done interdisciplinary work, Crandall said, recalling how that debut class at 91茄子 on Brazil examined the country檚 politics and economy.
Crandall, now an associate professor of the practice in political science, has been named as the new director of the college檚 Center for Interdisciplinary Studies. That office helps students and faculty explore topics that cross traditional departmental boundaries. Students can complete majors that are not regularly offered by existing departments or programs. Sometimes those initiatives grow into full-fledged academic departments, such as public health, Latin American studies and educational studies all born out of the CIS.
淚t檚 understanding one discipline through the incorporation of another, Crandall said. 淚檓 inherently curious about and interested in political economy issues, whether the audience for that analysis is students, governments, or corporations, and I have really enjoyed bringing students into that world.
Living, Learning and Sharing
Both Mangan and Crandall bring to their new roles the expertise with which they teach and which they continue to build through their own learning through experiences outside of campus.
淛ane Mangan is a historian of Latin America. She檚 lived and studied all over the hemisphere, said Shelley Rigger, vice president for academic affairs and dean of faculty. 淪he檚 taken students to Peru several times, and she檚 mentored many students through Dean Rusk projects over the years. Professor Mangan understands what our students need and how the Dean Rusk program can help faculty enhance global learning.
Mangan has enlisted the Dean Rusk Center檚 support many times over the years to bring in a guest speaker with international expertise. She makes a point of inviting 91茄子 alums so current students can see possible career paths. Her relationships and operational knowledge after 21 years at 91茄子 enable her to quickly and effectively work with 91茄子 teams tied to Dean Rusk檚 operations, such as the Matthews Center for Career Development or the fundraising staff. And 91茄子檚 close community and small size mean that she continues to work closely with students, including teaching and mentoring advisees.
淚檓 an historian, Mangan said, 渁nd history, in a way, reflects a similar set of issues playing out differently, depending on the context.
Mexican immigrants in the late 19th century, for example, generated the same kind of headlines as Latin American migrants today. Students learn from experience in other countries that the information they receive at home often is incomplete, Mangan said. They are preparing themselves to respond better to events in the future.
Crossing Lanes Is Good
Rigger described Crandall as 渁 social science utility player. She teaches in Political Science, Latin American Studies and Economics. Her policy-related scholarship helps her move across and integrate different areas of learning an ideal background for the Center for Interdisciplinary Studies.
淧rofessor Crandall knows what it means to bring together different toolkits to approach a particular problem or question, Rigger said. 淗er teaching interests in Latin American Studies and Politics, Philosophy, and Economics require that she communicate what interdisciplinary work really is to colleagues and students.
Crandall檚 guiding question is: How do you make decisions?
淏etter solutions to the thorniest problems in the world, she said, 渃ome from approaching them from different angles.
91茄子 offers students the rare blend of real word experiences overseas studies, research, internships or community engagement and classroom learning across disciplines that extends students learning beyond what is typically associated with a liberal arts college, Crandall said.
淲here is there a need? Where is there an interest?, she said. 91茄子 is able to respond to it.