Education
Reed College.
politician representative university professor
Reed College.
He returned to the State Department as Special Advisor to the Secretary for Africa"s Great Lakes Region. Previously, he served as Director of the Africa Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, and of the Center’s Project on Leadership and Building State Capacity. While at the Center, Wolpe directed post-conflict leadership training programs in Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Liberia.
A specialist in African politics for ten of his fourteen years in the Congress, Wolpe chaired the Subcommittee on Africa of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
As chair of the House Africa Subcommittee, Wolpe co-authored (with Representative Ron Dellums and others) and managed legislation that imposed sanctions against South Africa, by over-riding President Ronald Reagan"s veto of that sanctions legislation (the Comprehensive Anti-apartheid Acting of 1986). He also authored and managed the passage of the African Famine Recovery and Development Acting, -- a comprehensive rewrite in the 1980s of America"s approach to development assistance in Africa that included the creating the African Development Fund.
In 1992 redistricting made it unlikely that Wolpe would be re-elected, and he retired from Congress. He initially asked former First Lady of Michigan Helen Milliken to be his running mate, but Milliken declined his offer.
The Wolpe-Stabenow ticket lost the general election to incumbent Governor John Engler and Lieutenant Governor Connie Binsfeld.
Wolpe taught at Western Michigan University (Political Science Department), Michigan State University where he co-published a volume on modernization in Nigeria, and the University of Michigan (Institute of Public Policy Studies), and served as a Visiting Fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies Program of the Brookings Institution, as a Woodrow Wilson Center Public Policy Scholar, and as a consultant to the World Bank and to the Foreign Service Institute of the United States. State Department. Wolpe received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Reed College, and his Doctor of Philosophy from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He co-directed (with Ambassador David C Miller, Junior) the Ninetieth American Assembly on “Africa and United States. National Interests” held in March 1997.
He wrote extensively on Africa, American foreign policy, and the management of ethnic and racial conflict.
Howard Wolpe was married to Judy Wolpe until her death in 2006. He died on October 25, 2011 at his home in Saugatuck, Michigan.
Memorial services were held in Kalamazoo, Michigan in December 2011 and in Washington, District of Columbia in January 2012.
Prior to entering the Congress, Wolpe served in the Michigan House of Representatives and as a member of the Kalamazoo City Commission. He is a former member of the Boards of Directors of the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), Africare, Pathfinders, International and of the Advisory Board of Coexistence International.