David  Rubin

David Rubin

  • Dean Emeritus

    Communications

David Rubin served as dean of the Newhouse School from July 1990 to June 2008. During his tenure as dean he built a strong development and fundraising operation. Among the gifts he helped to secure are $15 million from the Newhouse Foundation for the construction of Newhouse 3; $1.5 million from the Knight Foundation for a chair in political journalism; $250,000 from the Carnegie Corporation of New York to support new initiatives in the training of young journalists; $1 million from the Goldring Foundation to support the Goldring Arts Journalism program; $500,000 from Arthur Liu to support graduate multicultural fellowships; $3 million from the Tsairis Foundation to support a chair in documentary photography; a $1 million gift to start the Tully Center for Free Speech; and more.

On his watch, the school founded the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture; the Healthy Campus initiative (to study which health communications messages have resonance with a young audience), and the Institute for the Study of the Judiciary, Politics and the Media (in cooperation with SU's College of Law and Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs).

Working with the Syracuse Post-Standard and the Newhouse family, he founded the Newhouse Minority Fellows Program, which has trained and placed nearly 100 minority-group members in newsrooms around the country.

He built a strong career development center for the exclusive use of Newhouse students, and he strengthened the school's alumni relations effort in part by building an active and prominent Newhouse Advisory Board, also new to the school.

After stepping down as dean, he rejoined the faculty full-time and taught until his retirement in December 2016.

Rubin has twice served as a Pulitzer Prize juror. He headed the Task Force on the Public's Right to Know for the Presidential Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant, producing a detailed report on the flow of information during that accident.

He was on the faculty at NYU from 1971-1990. He holds a B.A. from Columbia College and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Stanford University.