A former patrol officer in the police department in Berkeley, California, Neil Gross is a professor of sociology at Colby College, an advocate for police reform, and an expert on campus politics and free speech. He has taught at Princeton, the University of British Columbia, Harvard, and the University of Southern California.
A frequent contributor to the New York Times, Neil is the author of three books, including Why Are Professors Liberal and Why Do Conservatives Care? (Harvard University Press, 2013), Richard Rorty: The Making of an American Philosopher (University of Chicago Press, 2008), and his most recent, Walk the Walk: How Three Police Chiefs Defied the Odds and Changed Cop Culture, called “a crucial guide to solving a pressing social issue” by Publishers Weekly.
In the New York Times:
Insights on how confidence and vulnerability coexist in high-performing teams from decorated Navy fighter pilot Jack Becker's proven debrief strategies.
Read More
The champion mindset that separates top performers from everyone else with insights from elite performance speaker Ross Bernstein.
Read More
Discover where real inspiration comes from with Chris Schembra's proven approach to human connection that transforms workplace culture and employee engagement.
Read More
Learn how brand identity drives business success from the inside out with expert insights from Denise Lee Yohn on culture, purpose, and customer experience.
Read More
AI decision-making needs guardrails. Explore how keynote speakers help leaders build responsible AI governance without sacrificing innovation.
Read More
Storytelling expert Bruce Turkel shares proven techniques to transform events from forgettable presentations into experiences audiences remember.
Read More