John Roosevelt Boettiger
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Roosevelt Boettiger (born March 30, 1939) is the youngest child of Anna Roosevelt Boettiger and her second husband, John Boettiger, and is grandson of United States President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt. He lives in Norway.
Boettiger served for 20 years as Professor of Human Development at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts, of which he was founding faculty member. He created and was chairman of Hampshire's interdisciplinary Human Development Program.
Leaving Hampshire to work with graduate students in clinical psychology, John was Professor of Psychology and Dean of Student Affairs at the California School of Professional Psychology. He is Vice-President and Treasurer of the Christopher Reynolds Foundation, on whose board he has served for over 30 years. Trained as a political scientist at Columbia University before moving to a career in psychology, John taught at Amherst College, was a consultant to and member of the Social Science Department of the RAND Corporation, and briefly served as a desk officer at the United States Department of State.
Earlier in his career, John wrote widely on educational and political themes, including two books on United States policy in Vietnam. He has an interest in the intersections of social history, narrative and psychology, themes explored in his book: A Love in Shadow, published by W.W. Norton.
John Roosevelt Boettiger has four children: Adam Boettiger, Sara Boettiger, Joshua Boettiger, and Paul Boettiger.

