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Latest revision as of 06:00, 5 August 2024
David Kellogg | |
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Occupation | professor |
David Kellogg is an American political scientist who was the publisher of Foreign Affairs magazine for 25 years.[1][2][3]
The New York Times quoted Kellogg in 1998, in an article on the notable difference between Foreign Affairs and other academic journals.[4] He described how unusual it was for an academic journal to turn a profit. Under Kellogg's administration James F. Hoge Jr. had been appointed editor, and he had lead the magazine to make profits of several hundred thousand dollars, per year.
References
- ↑ Allen McDuffee. Foreign Affairs announces new publisher, Washington Post, 2012-07-09. Retrieved on 2020-11-05. “Hammes succeeds David Kellogg, who is retiring after 25 years.”
- ↑ Foreign Affairs Latest Issue 'The World Ahead' Invites World Leaders and Experts to Forecast the Major Trends of the Next Decade, Newswire, 2010-10-19. Retrieved on 2020-11-05. “According to David Kellogg, Publisher, 'This special issue of Foreign Affairs has already raised the bar for the magazine - it is the first single-themed and largest issue ever produced. The cover has added a gatefold and dramatic cover graphics. Readership (made up of 20% newsstand and 80% subscriber based) continues to grow. In addition, ad revenue for the Nov/Dec issue grew 65% year over year, quite an enviable position in the publishing business today'.”
- ↑ Intern Dream Job: 'Foreign Affairs' Magazine, Wired magazine, 1997-01-21. Retrieved on 2020-11-05. “Although he holds his cards close to his chest, a look at some of Kellogg's new projects - licensing the magazine's contents for publication in Japan and Brazil, creating custom anthologies and syndicating - indicates some marketing savvy and a willingness to expand beyond the more claustrophobically clubby purlieus of the Council.”
- ↑ Robin Pogrebin. Foreign Affairs Magazine Becoming Harder to Predict, The New York Times, 1998-01-12, p. D1. Retrieved on 2020-11-05. “For the last decade, Foreign Affairs has also made several hundred thousand dollars profit, Mr. Kellogg said, adding that this was rare for a scholarly magazine.”