Alumni Impact
GUIDO IMBENS MA’89, PHD’91, LHD’22 HON. is an economics professor at Stanford University. He was awarded Brown’s Horace Mann Medal in 2017 for his contributions to the economics field, shared the 2021 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences, and received an honorary degree from Brown in 2022.
“Coming to Brown University opened up a whole new world for me. It was the first time I came to the United States, and the friendliness of the [economics] department and the University community made me feel very welcome. It was not just the rigor of the academic program that prepared me well for my subsequent work, it was also the humanity of the department. I vividly remember getting invited by one of the profes- sors for a family Thanksgiving dinner. As a faculty, we now often invite graduate students to our house to make them feel welcome and seen.”
JAMES B. GARVIN ’78, SCM’81, PHD’84, P’17 is the NASA Goddard chief scientist and principal investigator of the DAVINCI mission to Venus scheduled to launch in June 2029.
“Brown gave me the confidence to explore across academic boundaries— from paleontology and mathematical analysis of computer algorithms to art history and semiotics. The Brown experiences I had from freshman to PhD candidate helped me shape a career of space exploration. Thanks to Brown, my experiment flew in the Space Shuttle (Endeavour), and I was able to experience the joy of the first laser light hitting Mars as well as the Hubble Space Telescope searching the Moon for resources. These are all the stuff of dreams, yet Brown (and fellow Brown students and faculty) helped me pursue such ideas with a hopeful confidence and tenacity to see them fly.
My now 38-year career at NASA was more than catalyzed by my Brown education, and I will forever be grateful for all I learned. And I even got to appear on David Letterman!”
MARCIA CHATELAIN, MA’03, PHD’08 is a professor of history and African American studies at George- town University, a scholar of African American life and culture, a speaker about pervasive social issues and activist movements, and an acclaimed author. Her book Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America received the Pulitzer Prize for history in 2021. At Brown, she received her master’s and doctoral degrees in American Civilization.
“My time at Brown University in the PhD program in American Civilization (now American Studies) revealed to me that disciplinary boundaries were made to be challenged and some- times broken. Having received training and mentorship from historians, sociologists, and literary critics, and having access to lectures by cognitive scientists, and having been able to build friendships with emerging physicians and engineers, Brown taught me that research is always collaborative. My explorations into the various dynamics of African American history are informed by an array of thinkers, and I am ever grateful to Brown for giving me the skills and confidence to pursue my curiosities and to seek different ways of looking at the world.”
STEFANIE TOMPKINS MSC’93, PHD’97 is the director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), a research and development agency of the U.S. Department of Defense.
"I lead a high-risk, high-payoff research and development agency within the Department of Defense, charged with making pivotal investments in breakthrough technologies for national security. Past successes include the Saturn V rocket, stealth aircraft, the ARPANET (which became the internet), self-driving cars, and mRNA vaccines— we are working on what comes next! In my job, I see hundreds of new ideas across many technology domains and have to make critical judgments about which ones we are going to take risks on. Brown prepared me for this in three ways: first, by training me as a geologist, an incredibly diverse field that requires you to use many different STEM disciplines (math, chemistry, physics, engineering); second, by honing my capacity for critical thinking; and third, by providing amazing role models."