Steven
Anderson
FHS President, 1997 - present
Steven
Anderson's (1956- ) educational background includes
a 1977 Bachelor of Science degree in forest management from Rutgers
University, a 1979 Master of Science degree in forest soils from the
University of Washington, and a 1987 Ph.D. in forest economics from
North Carolina State University. Anderson worked in forestry positions
with the United States Forest Service in Oregon and with Native American
community groups in Alaska prior to becoming a forestry professor at
Oklahoma State University (OSU) in 1991. While employed at OSU, he served
as leader of the university's Extension Forestry, Wildlife and Aquaculture
Program.
In 1997 Anderson succeeded
Pete Steen, becoming the fourth president of the Forest History Society.
Under his leadership the Society has pursued numerous programs in digitization,
publication, environmental
education, and research, many
supported by grants obtained by Anderson. He was a primary planner behind
the joint FHS-ASEH meeting held in Durham, N.C., in 2001 and regularly
provides guidance for ASEH leaders about issues affecting the publication
of Environmental History. During his tenure as executive director,
Steve Anderson has continued to build strong cooperative relationships
with forestry associations, the United States Forest Service, and corporate
forestry leaders interested in preserving the history of their industry.
Anderson has long taken a
leadership role in several forestry organizations, especially the Society
of American Foresters, for whom he has served as a member of several
of key committees at both the national and local level. He is the recipient
of numerous local and national awards, has completed many leadership
training courses, and maintains professional memberships in such organizations
as the American Forestry Association, the Society of Environmental Journalists,
the Soil and Water Conservation Society, and the International Society
of Tropical Foresters.4