Age, Biography and Wiki

Michael S. Roth was born on 8 April, 1957 in Brooklyn, New York, United States. Discover Michael S. Roth's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 67 years old?

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Age 67 years old
Zodiac Sign Aries
Born 8 April, 1957
Birthday 8 April
Birthplace Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
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Michael S. Roth Height, Weight & Measurements

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Who Is Michael S. Roth's Wife?

His wife is Kari Weil

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Wife Kari Weil
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Michael S. Roth Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Michael S. Roth worth at the age of 67 years old? Michael S. Roth’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from . We have estimated Michael S. Roth's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
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Timeline

2019

Roth has undertaken several initiatives at Wesleyan University, including expanding the endowment, re-orienting fundraising and spending to emphasize support for financial aid and core academic programs, increasing grant support for University undergraduates who receive financial aid, providing scholarships for veterans of the military, working with faculty on interdisciplinary and curricular initiatives, and working "to anchor civic engagement and innovation within the University’s curriculum." With regard to the latter, the University announced in May 2011 a $2 million donation to establish the Patricelli Center for Social Entrepreneurship, which will support students who want to create programs and organizations serving the public good anywhere in the world.

In November 2019, the Wesleyan Student Assembly hosted an open Q&A session with Roth. students asked questions regarding divestment from the Israeli occupation. According to The Wesleyan Argus, when asked, "Why do you value your own projections on how change can be made for the lives of Palestinians over the Palestinians who are calling for divestment?" by a student, Roth answered "Palestinians, I’m not sure who you mean exactly, but if you mean, let’s say, Hamas—". After interrupted, when asked to clarify by Roth, the student responded, "Palestinians who are living lives right now".

In 2019, USLAC organized a three-day protest during WesFest, a university organized event for perspective students, rallying around the already existing demand for "Five More Workers". A large highlight by protesters was Roth's salary, citing the $926,183 figure to highlight the misallocation of resources at the school. Roth also faced criticism for treatment of protesters and custodians as it related to this movement.

Roth announced the hiring of one more custodian before the 2019-2020 school year, and pushes to hire more custodians continued.

"I’ve seen the petition, but it says things like ‘Roth wants to know where custodians piss and shit.’ Although that’s an interesting idea, as a Freudian, it’s just misinformation. It may be the case that the thousand people who signed it don’t want geo-fencing. But it’s probably not the case."

2018

2018 saw another rise in attention an protest on this issue, once again largely directed at Roth. The student group United Student Labor Action Coalition (USLAC) brought attention to the firing of a custodian, as well as the workload issue, amplifying the demand for Wesleyan to hire five more custodians.

2016

Scott Backer was fired from Wesleyan as Associate Dean of Students in October of 2016 when a Boston Globe article was released, revealing he was fired from Vermont Academy in 2007 for predatory behavior with a student. Two hundred students held a town hall later that week, coming to the consensus that Roth and Wesleyan Vice President for Equity and Inclusion/Title IX Officer Antonio Farias should resign. Students criticized the lack of transparency of administration, as well as, as the Wesleyan Argus states, "what they argue is the administration’s ongoing failure to adequately reform sexual assault policy and address the issue of sexual assault on campus."

These events spurred protests on October 10th, 2016, during an open house day at Wesleyan. These were known under the name "Who Runs Wes?". Students had various flyers, demonstrations, and disruptions meant to bring attention to shortcomings of the University, including lack of transparency regarding the Backer firing, invasive/inappropriate Title IX hearings, mistreatment of marginalized students, Wesleyan's theft of land, property, and human remains of Wangunk people, and various other issues.

2015

Roth publicly condemned the academic boycott of Israeli institutions made by the American Studies Association and other scholarly organizations as part of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Movement, a stance that attracted further protest from many Wesleyan alumni.Following a April 2015 protest in Roth's office, in which students demanded that Wesleyan University divest its endowment from the private prison industry, the Israeli occupation, and the fossil fuel industry, Roth made a blog post, in part stating, "I don’t see Wesleyan’s selling stock as being at all relevant to the creation of conditions for peace in the Middle East. Indeed, I think that the call for selling stock is a distraction from the essential policy and diplomatic challenges ahead.", coming in direct conflict the student protesters' ideologies.

Divestment from private prisons was among the demands for divestment in a 2015 protest in Roth's office, after which Roth reported Wesleyan had no investments in private prisons. Roth himself addressed the closed parameters of their considerations as what to what counted as an investment. The quick response rose questions from students regarding the transparency of the endowment.

2014

In 2014, Roth instituted the requirement that in all fraternities at Wesleyan, "Women as well as men must be full members and well represented in the body and leadership of the organization." This was in reaction to reports of sexual assault in frat houses over the years, including the years of violent activity at the house of the now dissolved Wesleyan chapter of Beta Theta Pi. While giving organizations three years to comply, Wesleyan did not give students the option to live in single-sex frats for the 2015-16 school year. The Wesleyan chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon (DKE) called the decision "political correctness gone wrong", and filed a discrimination lawsuit against Wesleyan. In the case, where the Kent Literary Club (KLC), the alumni chapter of DKE, was suing Wesleyan University, the jury ruled in KLC's favor on the grounds that Roth had given frats three years to meet requirements, and the option for living in single-sex frats was taken away within a year. Wesleyan took the case to the Connecticut Supreme Court, which heard oral arguments in the case in early 2019.

2013

The Wesleyan University African American Studies program (AFAM) was stated to have only two English professors by the end of the 2013-2014 school year, as opposed to seven tenured or tenure-tracked professors, as well as visiting professors, in 2009. This prompted students to put a proposal through the Wesleyan Student Assembly in early May 2014, calling for the prioritization of hiring more AFAM professors, as well as calling on Roth and Provost Ruth Striegel Weissman to give public responses. On May 14th, around 100 students participated in a march at Wesleyan and sit-in in South College (Roth's office building) to protest the issue. While protesting, students sang a re-written version of the Wesleyan Fight Song, including the lyrics, "Roth's killing AFAM, where's our inclusion?" A panel with both targets was held later in the day, where many students still found frustration with Roth and Weissman given lack of concrete action of the issue. In a blog post two days later, Roth announced the search for more professors.

In September 2013, a rally was held at a Wesleyan football game to protest custodial working conditions. Around the same time, a letter directed at Roth from custodians was released, in part stating:

2012

In October 2012, Roth engaged in a public confrontation with a reporter from Democracy Now! during student protests against Wesleyan's decision to end need-blind admissions, which involved Roth putting his head to the camera and taking the reporter's microphone.

Also in October 2012, students were grabbed by Roth, who was confronting them regarding using chalk on Wyllys Avenue (a street not owned by Wesleyan) as a form of protest, determined to be permissible by both Wesleyan University and the City of Middletown, Connecticut. Many found this to be an unnecessary and controversial action by Roth.

Wesleyan University cut its custodial staff from 60 to 50 between 2012 and 2014, resulting in reports of custodians being overworked. It was publicly know conditions were changing as early as 2012 (due to changing workloads), and custodians publicly protested in 2013, when five people had already been fired.

2011

In Winter of 2008, Roth approved a decision to remove "the annual music and arts festival Zonker Harris Day" from the University's calendar of events, saying: "The institution should make it clear that it's not supporting things that are stupid." The Wesleyan college newspaper noted: "The annual celebration references a perpetually-stoned character in Garry Trudeau's Doonesbury comic strip, inspiring University participants to emulate Zonker Harris's drug habits." The day was renamed "Ze Who Must Not Be Named." The decision earned Roth an appearance in a Doonesbury strip in Autumn 2010. On March 22, 2011, the university administration officially reversed its decision on the festival's name. The festival was again known as Zonker Harris Day beginning with the 2011 festival in April.

2010

Various student groups, including WesDivest and Climate Action Group, have been pushing for the Wesleyan University endowment to divest from fossil fuel companies since the early 2010s. After a 2015 protest to divest from the fossil fuel industry, private prisons, and the Israeli occupation, Roth posted a blog post, stating,

2009

Roth has overseen the launch of "[t]he Allbritton Center for the Study of Public Life, which links intellectual work on campus to policy issues nationally and internationally", "the Shapiro Creative Writing Center, which brings together students and faculty seriously engaged in writing" and the Usdan University Center. The former two opened in the fall of 2009. A College of the Environment also has been launched and serves as the University's third multidisciplinary College in addition to the College of Social Studies and the College of Letters.

2007

In 2007, many Wesleyan students and alumni became concerned with Wesleyan's investments in General Dynamics and Raytheon, two weapon manufacturers. This led the Wesleyan student group, Students for Ending the War in Iraq (SEWI), to lead a campaign for Wesleyan's divestment from weapons contractors, with various conservative student detractors, as well as actions on part of the Wesleyan Student Assembly. In 2008, the Wesleyan Board of Trustees (on which Roth sits) declined to divest from weapon contractors.

2005

The Green Street Art Center, having opened in 2005, closed in 2017 at Roth's decision. As The Wesleyan Argus described it, "the Green Street Center has provided programming that many residents have found essential, from hip-hop, comedy, theater, and Shakespeare performance programs to a STEM summer camp for girls and a math training program for local teachers." This garnered many reactions from Wesleyan students and community members alike. As stated in the Hartford Courant, as stated by community member's regarding reactions by members of the North End community of Middletown:

2001

Roth co-edited Looking for Los Angeles: Architecture, Film, Photography and The Urban Landscape and Disturbing Remains: Memory, History, and Crisis in the Twentieth Century (both Getty Research Institute, 2001). Roth has published, in recent years, essays and book reviews in the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Washington Post, The Chronicle of Higher Education, the Huffington Post, Book Forum, Rethinking History, and Wesleyan's History and Theory.

1987

Roth has described his scholarly interests as centered on “how people make sense of the past.” He has edited many volumes in intellectual and cultural history and is the author of six books: Psycho-Analysis as History: Negation and Freedom in Freud (Cornell University Press, 1987, 1995); Knowing and History: Appropriations of Hegel in Twentieth Century France (Cornell University Press, 1988); The Ironist’s Cage: Trauma, Memory and the Construction of History (Columbia University Press, 1995); and Irresistible Decay: Ruins Reclaimed, with Clare Lyons and Charles Merewether (Getty Research Institute, 1997). More recent works include Memory, Trauma, and History: Essays on Living With the Past (Columbia University Press, autumn 2011) Beyond The University-Why Liberal Education Matters (Yale University Press, 2014), " and Safe Enough Spaces: A Pragmatist's Approach to Inclusion, Free Speech, and Political Correctness on College Campuses (Yale University Press, August 2019).

1978

A native of Brooklyn, Roth was the second in his family to attend college. He graduated from Wesleyan University in 1978, completing his studies in three years and graduating summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. While there, he was a member and eventual president of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. He designed his own major in the history of psychological theory. He later went to earn his Ph.D from Princeton University in 1984. Roth teaches every semester and, in May 2009, was appointed University Professor at Wesleyan. Roth is Jewish.

1957

Michael Scott Roth (born April 8, 1957) is an American academic and university administrator. He became the 16th president of Wesleyan University in 2007. Formerly, he was the 8th president of the California College of the Arts (2000–2007), associate director of the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles, and Director of European Studies at Claremont Graduate University. He was also the H.B. Professor of Humanities at Scripps College, where he was the founding director of the Scripps College Humanities Institute.