Background
Fleming, Robben Wright was born on December 18, 1916 in Paw Paw, Illinois, United States. Son of Edmunds Palmer Fleming and Emily Jeannette (Wheeler) Boutwell.
( Robben W. Fleming was President of the University of Mi...)
Robben W. Fleming was President of the University of Michigan during the turmoil of the Vietnam era. He brought a clear and effective philosophy to the challenges he faced as manager and leader in a turbulent time. Fleming recounts the dramatic confrontations and demonstrations at Michigan over the war in Vietnam, military research in universities, the investment of university endowment funds in South African enterprises, and black student campaigns for improved conditions on campus. Robben W. Fleming has much to teach. There are lessons for all who face the challenges of leadership in this lively and readable autobiography of one who has displayed grace, style and effectiveness in difficult and sometimes threatening situations. Tempests into Rainbows also explores the influences on his life that nurtured his exceptional ability to create agreement and to solve conflict. The story of his formative years is filled with both humor and pathos. Fleming writes about local personalities, the deaths of his "twin" brother and father, and the difficulties of the family during the economic recession of the 1920s and 1930s. Academic and athletic prowess enabled him to put himself through college and law school, emerging just in time to serve as a military government officer with troops in North Africa and Europe. After World War II, Fleming became a specialist in labor-management relations, teaching at the University of Illinois and serving as a professional mediator and arbitrator of labor disputes. Then in 1964 he became Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin in Madison, and later President of the University of Michigan until 1979. Although he remains active as a consultant deploying his mediation skills, his last career position was as President of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. This unusual autobiography, appealing in its honesty and in the original story it has to tell, is also instructive in showing how a thoughtful person with a humane, consistent philosophy can manage when chaos and turmoil threaten. It will thus appeal not only to those who knew Fleming and who have ties to the universities in which he served, but also to all who manage and study the management of complex institutions. "Robben Fleming has written a fascinating memoir, especially his intensely personal account of the trials and terrors that faced this university president as Ann Arbor's student body--and he came to grips with the civil rights revolution and the Vietnam War." ---Mike Wallace "To relive Robben Fleming's life is to relive an American epoch. There was a time when America was at war with its enemies, and a time when America was at war with itself. He writes perceptively from both battlegrounds." ---Daniel Schorr "Robben Fleming is a giant--a creative and imaginative leader of exceptional talent. All of us can learn from the lessons of his life. His book is a treasure." ---Newton N. Minow
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Fleming, Robben Wright was born on December 18, 1916 in Paw Paw, Illinois, United States. Son of Edmunds Palmer Fleming and Emily Jeannette (Wheeler) Boutwell.
Bachelor, Beloit College, 1938. Bachelor of Laws, University Wisconsin, 1941. Degree (honorary), Michigan State University, 1967.
Degree (honorary), University Michigan, 1968. Degree (honorary), University Wisconsin, 1968. Degree (honorary), University Illinois, 1969.
Degree (honorary), Ohio State University, 1972. Degree (honorary), Columbia University, 1974. Degree (honorary), Boston College, 1979.
He worked for the United States. Securities and Exchange Commission and the War Labor Board. During the Second World War, he served as a Captain in North Africa and Europe for six years. In 1947, he served as the head of the Industrial Relations Center in Wisconsin.
In 1952, he became Assistant Professor and Director of the Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations at the University of Illinois.
In 1958, he became a Professor of Law at Illinois. In 1964, he became the Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he helped assuage student protests in 1964.
He also expanded university projects in Nigeria, France, Germany and Japan. In 1967, he paid the bail for students who had been arrested for blockading a university building.
In 1968, he became the ninth President of the University of Michigan.
He led discussions during the Black Action Movement strike, with students demanding more African-American students on campus. He also helped turn the campuses at Dearborn and Flint into four-year institutions. He stepped down as President in 1978.
From 1979 to 1981, he worked for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
In 1981, he became a full Professor at the U-M. In 1988, he served again as interim President of the U-M, tackling concerns over racial, sexual and gay-lesbian discrimination, to no avail: Fleming had tried to devise an adjudication system to address discrimination concerns, but the effort failed when a federal district judge ruled that it violated the First Amendment. From 1985 to 1990, he worked as a representative for Michigan Governor James Blanchard.
He died in Ann Arbor, Michigan in January 2010.
( Robben W. Fleming was President of the University of Mi...)
Of Board National Institute for Dispute Resolution, Johnson Foundation, Recine, Wisconsin.
Children: Nancy Jo, James Edmund, Caroline Elizabeth.