SA国际传媒

Skip to main content
By Dick Anderson Photos by Marc Campos
Professor Peter Dreier at Anderson Field

After 32 years as a professor at SA国际传媒, Dreier will return in 2026 as an adjunct鈥攖o teach his first-ever class on poverty and inequality and take one more swing at Campaign Semester

Every spring, the Department of Urban and Environmental Policy hands out student awards for community service鈥攁nd this year the department named a new award after Professor Peter Dreier, who retired in June after 32 years at Occidental. 鈥淭hey wanted to call it the Troublemaker Award,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 said, 鈥楥all it the Public Service and Community Organizing Award or something like that.鈥欌 (Ultimately, the Peter Dreier Community Organizing and Public Service Award was presented to Emma Galbraith 鈥25 on April 30.)

President Tom Stritikus and Professor Peter Dreier at Commencement in May 2025.
President Tom Stritikus and Professor Peter Dreier at Commencement in May.

I鈥檝e always believed鈥攁nd this is what I鈥檝e taught in my courses鈥攖hat to be an effective change-maker you have to have an inside and an outside strategy,鈥 Dreier explains. 鈥淵ou have to have people organizing on the outside and causing 鈥榞ood trouble,鈥 like John Lewis said. And then you have to have people on the inside who can be your brokers within the government to turn ideas into policy, like Lewis became when he was elected to Congress; or Bernie Sanders, or Pramila Jayapal, or Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who were all activists before running for office. And I was one of those 鈥榠nsiders鈥 for about eight years when I was a deputy to the mayor in Boston. But you can only be effective if there鈥檚 a pressure group on the outside, influencing the political environment.鈥

In 1992, Dreier interviewed with Occidental for the newly endowed position of the E.P. Clapp Distinguished Professor of Politics鈥攚hose benefactor, Norton Clapp, was CEO of the Weyerhaeuser Company, a major lumber and timber provider and Fortune 500 company based in Seattle. (The chair is named for Clapp鈥檚 father, who was a doctor in Pasadena.) 鈥淭he only condition that Mr. Clapp had for the position was that it had to be somebody who had practical experience in politics as well as a Ph.D. and was an academic,鈥 Dreier recalls. 鈥淎fter I got the job, I flew to Seattle to spend a few hours with him, along with President John Slaughter.鈥

Dreier鈥檚 mandate was to start a public policy program inside the Politics Department, which took root and grew into the Department of Urban and Environmental Policy (UEP). 鈥淎t the time it was just me, so I hired a lot of adjuncts,鈥 he says. One such person was historian and author Richard Rothstein, who later published a best-selling book about racism titled The Color of Law (2017). 鈥淗e was an amazing teacher. I was lucky that L.A. has so many incredible people you can draw on to teach.鈥

In 1997, Dreier lured Bob Gottlieb away from UCLA to become the Henry R. Luce Professor of Urban and Environmental Studies, 鈥渟o now I had a full-time UEP colleague,鈥 Dreier says. In 2005, the College hired Martha Matsuoka 鈥83 (now executive director of the Urban and Environmental Policy Institute), and today there are six UEP faculty members (including the most recent addition, Instructor Madeline Wander 鈥08, a UEP major at SA国际传媒 and Ph.D. graduate of UCLA). 鈥淭he people we鈥檝e hired in the department have this combination of academic training and a commitment to public service.鈥

As a student at Syracuse University, Dreier majored in journalism and sociology, graduating in 1970. He took Journalism 101 from Roland Wolseley. At the time, most students didn鈥檛 know that Wolseley had been a pacifist and McCarthy-era blacklist victim. 鈥淗e taught us that journalists should pursue the truth and be objective and even-handed, but it doesn鈥檛 mean we give up our rights to engage in the world,鈥 Dreier says. 鈥淭hat sounds silly now, but it was heresy back then.鈥

Dreier and his wife and daughters in an SA国际传媒Wear ad from the Fall 2000 Occidental magazine.
Dreier and his wife, Terry Meng, and 3-year-old twin daughters, Amelia and Sarah, model 鈥渟weat-free鈥 T-shirts in the Fall 2000 Occidental magazine.

Prior to joining the SA国际传媒 faculty, Dreier had worked as a newspaper reporter, a community organizer, a professor at Tufts University, and as deputy for eight years under Boston Mayor Ray Flynn. Over the course of his SA国际传媒 career, he taught three primary courses: Intro to American Politics and Policy, Community Organizing and Leadership, and Urban Politics and Policy. He also taught Movements for Social Justice in the Politics Department and a course titled Work and Labor in America. In the late 1990s, he taught a first-year writing seminar about sweatshops, which prompted a student-led campaign to sell sweatshop-free clothing in the SA国际传媒 Bookstore.

鈥淚 still get emails from students who were in my classes,鈥 Dreier says. 鈥淥ne of them, who鈥檚 now a union organizer in New York, said 鈥業 never would have been involved in the labor movement if I hadn鈥檛 taken your freshman seminar.鈥 Those are the things you live for.鈥 Many of his former students have gone to work as community and union organizers, public interest lawyers, researchers for activist organizations, environmental and public health advocates, and similar careers.

In 2004, Dreier started a summer program to provide students with stipends and campus housing to work full-time with community-based nonprofit groups that address the housing crisis. In the last decade, Matsuoka has expanded the program to include groups that focus on public health, environmental justice, food, and immigrant rights.

Dreier suggests that even though colleges like Occidental are considered private institutions, they couldn鈥檛 exist without government funding. 鈥淎bout 20 percent of our students are on federal Pell Grants and other government financial aid. Faculty members get government grants to do research. The College borrows money to construct new buildings with government support.鈥 As a result, Dreier says, 鈥淲e鈥檙e a quasi-public institution and we owe it to the broader public to serve public needs. That means that the work we do ought to be about what鈥檚 going on in society.鈥

In 2018, Dreier co-authored a study titled Working for the Mouse: A Survey of Disneyland Resort Employees, that resulted in helping Disneyland workers get better contracts and led to a grassroots campaign to win a living wage law in Anaheim. Several other of his studies produced similar outcomes for food-insecure University of California employees and Kroger grocery workers. 鈥淚鈥檝e tried to use my academic skills for a public purpose and for social justice,鈥 Dreier says.

Dreier was co-chair of the 2015 campaign to adopt a minimum wage in Pasadena and an architect of a successful ballot measure campaign in 2022 to adopt a 鈥渕ansion tax鈥 in Los Angeles, which last year alone raised $400 million for affordable housing. He serves on the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy board of directors and on Pasadena鈥檚 Rental Housing Board, which oversees the city鈥檚 new rent control law.

Ever the journalist, Dreier has published more 1,000 articles in newspapers and magazines and an additional 100 or so in academic journals. The author of eight books (the most recent of which, Baseball Rebels and Major League Rebels, were published in 2022), he鈥檚 currently finishing up a fourth edition of Place Matters: Metropolitics for the Twenty-first Century (last revised in 2014). His latest research combines two of his favorite topics鈥 about professional baseball players who became elected officials. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if that鈥檒l be a book or not,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 been a lot of fun.

鈥淎merica鈥檚 celebrity culture鈥攁ctors, singers, and athletes using their fame to run for office鈥攊s nothing new,鈥 Dreier notes. In his initial research, he found over 100 baseball players who won public office after their time on the diamond鈥攁 wide spectrum of mayors, city council members, school board officials, state legislators, and county sheriffs.

A handful of them reached the federal level, including southpaw Wilmer "Vinegar Ben" Mizell, who served three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives representing North Carolina, and right-handed hurler Jim Bunning, who served six terms in Congress and 12 years in the Senate representing Kentucky.

鈥淭he players who ran for office include both liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans, but most of those who won elections were average players, not big stars,鈥 Dreier notes. Most of the nine Baseball Hall of Famers who ran for office, including Honus Wagner and Ernie Banks, actually lost their campaigns. One of them was Adrian Constantine 鈥淐ap鈥 Anson. 鈥淗e was a great player and manager for the Chicago White Stockings in the 1890s but also the leader of the effort to ban African Americans from the major leagues, which didn鈥檛 end until Jackie Robinson joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947.鈥 Anson briefly served as city clerk of Chicago before an unsuccessful bid for Cook County sheriff in 1906.

After a semester away from the classroom, Dreier will be back on campus next year to teach two classes close to his heart. 鈥淎s a freshman at Syracuse, I took a course about poverty with Michael Sawyer, an inspiring political science professor. I鈥檓 going to teach a class titled Poverty and Inequality next spring, coming full circle.鈥

Why now? 鈥淧overty is a persistent problem. A lot of our students come from low-income backgrounds,鈥 Dreier explained. 鈥淎mong all the wealthy countries in the world, we have the highest poverty rate and the most inequality. I think that鈥檚 a foundational, fundamental problem about our society and we have to come to grips with it.鈥

Times have changed over the last half-century, he adds, when 鈥渢he poor were considered the unemployed and the marginal. Now, most adults that are poor are working鈥攁nd that鈥檚 a broken promise of America. The class will focus on the causes, consequences, and solutions鈥攏ot just how bad poverty is, but what we can do about it.鈥

Campaign Semester participants from 2024 with Professors Dreier and Regina Freer.
Campaign Semester 2024 participants with Professors Dreier and Freer.

In addition, in fall 2026 Dreier will co-teach (with Politics Professor Regina Freer) the 10th iteration of Campaign Semester, the signature SA国际传媒 program they started in 2008 that offers students the opportunity to immerse themselves in a political campaign in a battleground state, earning a full semester of class credit for their time in the field and then in a seminar back on campus. 鈥淚 think we鈥檙e going to get a big turnout,鈥 he predicts. 鈥淭he 2026 midterm election will be a real test about the health of our democracy.鈥

鈥淎 lot of the work that goes into Campaign Semester is recruiting the students, helping them identify what campaigns they want to work on, and then using our connections to help them find placements,鈥 he adds. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of work, but it鈥檚 a labor of love.鈥

After Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne published a extolling the virtues of Campaign Semester in May 2024, Dreier fielded calls from academicians all over the country as well as the president of a foundation devoted to civic engagement. Consequently, 鈥淚 might spend part of the next year trying to get other colleges and universities to do some version of Campaign Semester,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t would be great if thousands, even tens of thousands, of students around the country had this kind of opportunity to get their hands dirty in the real world of politics.鈥

Dreier has often said that his goal is to train students to become 鈥減ractical idealists.鈥 One of his role models was nationally renowned author, activist, and socialist Michael Harrington, whose 1962 best-seller, The Other America, inspired the war on poverty. 鈥淭he words socialism or capitalism don鈥檛 appear in the book because it was still the Cold War and he wanted the book to be widely read,鈥 Dreier says. 鈥淚 was 15 years old when I heard him speak at my synagogue. My parents told me that he was a socialist鈥攁nd I agreed with everything he said. So, I told my parents, 鈥業 guess I鈥檓 a socialist, too.鈥欌

In Harrington鈥檚 1988 memoir The Long Distance Runner鈥攚ritten as he was battling cancer鈥斺淗e basically said, if you鈥檙e going to be for social change, you have to be in it for the long haul鈥攖hat in order to be an effective activist, you have to be a long distance runner,鈥 Dreier says. 鈥淏ut now, when I talk about what it means to be an activist, I say it differently. You have to be a relay racer. You have to hand off the baton. What I love about SA国际传媒 is that there's a lot of students who participated in Campaign Semester and other courses who have mentored other SA国际传媒 students. So, I see myself as handing off the baton.鈥

Sunari Weaver-Anderson 鈥24: It鈥檚 hard to overstate the influence Professor Peter Dreier has had on my academic and professional trajectory. I knew Occidental was the place for me when I discovered Campaign Semester鈥攁 program that allows students to work full-time on a swing-state campaign. I was sold on an SA国际传媒 education upon learning that hands-on engagement in social justice wasn鈥檛 the exception, but the norm in departments like Politics and Urban and Environmental Policy. Little did I know at the time, as an applicant, that this ethos was largely pioneered by Peter Dreier. 

Campaign Semester alumni, including Sunari Weaver-Anderson 鈥24, with Dreier on Jackie Robinson Day at Dodger Stadium.
Campaign Semester alumni, including Thomas Carney 鈥25 (standing), Noah Weitzner 鈥25 (seated, left), and Sunari Weaver-Anderson 鈥24, with Dreier on Jackie Robinson Day at Dodger Stadium in 2024.

I became one of Professor Dreier鈥檚 students in my junior year, during Campaign Semester. With his encouragement, I became the first student to spend my semester on a union-sponsored electoral campaign, canvassing with UNITE HERE members in Philadelphia for pro-union candidates. It鈥檚 this experience that I credit with finding my place in the labor movement, and it continues to drive my work in organizing and research to this day.

In Professor Dreier鈥檚 classes, there were no 鈥渆asy A鈥檚:鈥 He鈥檚 known for challenging students in discussions. But by the end of my SA国际传媒 education, I began to recognize the value of being held to a higher standard. When we student workers began to unionize ourselves, his classes weren鈥檛 just informative鈥攖hey were imperative. His Community Organizing course became a training ground for our union campaign and other student-led actions on campus. As students, we took the week鈥檚 readings and brought them to our weekend organizing meetings, attempting to replicate what we鈥檇 learned in class.

Perhaps most inspiring is that Peter Dreier walks the walk. Wherever there are community organizations or unions making real change in the city, chances are he鈥檚 not too far removed. Whether hopping on a call with a recent graduate to talk about career prospects, or turning a Dodgers game into an educational opportunity, Professor Dreier鈥檚 support of his students is unrelenting. While he may have retired from his tenured position, I know that his dedication to public service will continue to reach far beyond the classroom.

Thank you, Professor Dreier. I plan to carry your lessons with me for the rest of my life. I hope that in all of us former students, you see your teachings alive and well.

A political science major and Obama Scholar at SA国际传媒, Sunari Weaver-Anderson 鈥24 is a strategic researcher and organizer in labor, political, community, and student spaces.