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KINGSLEY DAVIS (20 August 1908–27 February 1997) Stanford University KINGSLEY DAVIS (20 August 1908–27 February 1997) K ingsley Davis was one of the outstanding demographers and sociologists of this century. Born in Tuxedo, Texas, 20 August 1908, he received a B.A. in English in 1930 and an M.A. in philosophy in 1932 from the University of Texas, then an M.A. in 1933 and a Ph.D. in 1936 in sociology from Harvard. He taught at Smith College 1934–36 and at Clark University in 1936–37. He was head of the Division of Sociology at Penn State in 1937–40. In 1940, he received a postdoctoral fellowship from the Social Science Research Council to study demography, and divided his time between studying at the University of Chicago, conducting a fertility survey in Puerto Rico, and working at the Bureau of the Census. In 1942, on leave from Penn State, he spent a year as a visiting research associate at the Office of Population Research at Princeton. In 1944, retaining his affiliation as a research associate at the OPR, he was given an appointment as associate professor of public affairs. In 1945, he received the title associate professor of sociology and anthropology, in a department he founded. The department had the special support of Frank Notestein, the director of the OPR, who had invited Kingsley to Princeton. The new department recruited Wilbert Moore, Paul Hatt, Marion Levy, and Mel Tumin, among others, and the department remains among the national leaders. In 1948 Kingsley accepted a position in the graduate faculty of political science at Columbia. While at Columbia, he was associate professor and professor of sociology, and associate director and director of the Bureau of Applied Social Research. In 1955 he moved to Berkeley as professor of sociology. He was chairman of the Department of Sociology, founded a program in international population and urban research, and helped establish the Berkeley department of demography. In 1977 he was appointed distinguished professor of sociology at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, and in 1981 he received a part-time appointment as a senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford. In addition to these academic activities, in which he has contributed so much to the success of creative institutions, Kingsley had an PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, VOL. 143, NO. 3, SEPTEMBER 1999 453 454 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS extraordinary record of original and influential research. He began prolifically while at Princeton in the 1940s. The Office of Population Research undertook a study of population change in a number of European countries under the impetus of the League of Nations. (The Economic, Financial, and Transit Department of the League had located in Princeton during the war, and arranged for the OPR to make population studies that might be useful in postwar peace negotiations.) In 1945, the Office of the Geographer of the Department of State made a contract with the OPR to extend the work on Europe to Asia. This contract supplied the support for Kingsley’s research that produced a monumental book, The Population of India and Pakistan, the standard source of information and analysis of the population of the subcontinent from 1880 to 1940. In the same period he wrote a notable nondemographic book entitled Human Society. He also played a prominent role in the development and naming of the Demographic Transition. Davis continued the production of original, useful, and influential research in several additional books, and very many articles and book chapters. His published research output makes him one of the most outstanding social scientists of the twentieth century. Elected 1960 Ansley J. Coale Senior Research Demographer Professor of Economics and Public Affairs, Emeritus Princeton University