William W. Grimes
Professor of International Relations & Political Science
Chair, Department of International Relations, Boston University ;
I first met Max Otte over twenty years ago at Princeton University, where we were both graduate students. From the beginning, I was struck by his intelligence and drive. Max had a clear vision of how he would build on a rigorous grounding in economics, politics, and business studies to become a leading businessman and policy analyst. He approached everything he did with both a sense of excitement about learning and a larger sense of how it would contribute to his larger goals.
At one point, Max and I co-wrote a paper on U.S.-Japan relations that became a chapter in a book by Hans Maull; I still remember some of the lessons that I learned from Max about how to be a focused, policy-relevant writer.
Several years later, when we had an opening at Boston University for an assistant professor of international economics and business, I immediately thought of Max. His job talk was prescient: it warned of the weak economic and political bases of the euro project. Max went on to teach at BU for several years, becoming a popular teacher as well as a fine colleague.
Eventually, his entrepreneurial projects back home in Germany became so successful that he made the decision to move back full-time. While we were disappointed to see him go, his many successes since that time have confirmed that he did the right thing.
Hinterlasse einen Kommentar
An der Diskussion beteiligen?Hinterlasse uns deinen Kommentar!