Nitin Nohria


Nitin Nohria is an Indian-American academic. He serves as the tenth and the current dean of Harvard Business School. He is also the George F. Baker Professor of Administration. He formerly served as Non-Executive Director of Tata Sons.

Early life

Nitin Nohria was born in New Delhi, India. His father, Kewal Nohria, was the former Chairman of Crompton Greaves in India and was an influence upon Nohria's decision to embark upon a career in business.
Nohria attended St. Columba's School in New Delhi, India for high school. He earned a B.Tech in Chemical Engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay and graduated in 1984 and did MBA from Jamnalal Bajaj Institute of Management Studies. He earned a Ph.D. in Management from the Sloan School of Management at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1988.

Career

Nohria served as co-chair of the HBS Leadership Initiative and sat on the executive committee of the University's interfaculty initiative on advanced leadership. Nohria is working with fellow HBS professor Rakesh Khurana, the World Economic Forum and the Aspen Institute to create a business oath, like the MBA Oath, that might be used globally. In a Harvard Business Review piece published in October 2008, Khurana and Nohria linked the connection between professionalism of a profession and the profession's ability to deliver value to society:
On May 4, 2010, Drew Gilpin Faust, President of Harvard University, appointed him Dean of Harvard Business School, effective July 1, 2010. He is the second HBS Dean, after John H. McArthur, born outside the United States and the first Dean since Dean Fouraker in the 1970s to live in the Dean's House on the HBS campus. In January 2014, he tendered an apology on behalf of Harvard Business School for the perceived sexism at the school.
In August 2017, Nohria argued that President Donald Trump's support for "isolationism" was detrimental to American economic prosperity, as it discouraged successful foreigners from immigrating to the United States.
In November 2019, Nohria announced that he will step down as dean on June 30, 2020. In light of the COVID-19 outbreak, Nohria decided to stay on as dean through the end of 2020.

Criticism

Race issues

In 2013, a lengthy front-page article in The New York Times described HBS efforts to deal with gender inequality. In 2014, Nohria apologized for HBS on how it had sometimes treated its female students and professors offensively.
Under Nohria as dean for 10 years at Harvard Business School, there was a low percentage of African Americans as enrolled MBA students and in its faculty only had just nine out of 270 faculty members who were black. A faculty member Steven S. Rogers stepped down from teaching at the business school for giving short shrift to the black experience and anti African practices.
In June 2020, Nohria publicly apologized for failing to mount a more successful fight against racism and pledged to move urgently forward with what he called an “anti-racism action plan.”

Personal life

Nohria is married with two daughters, both of whom currently attend Harvard College. Nohria earned "$727,365 in salary and benefits in 2014."