David Kellogg (political scientist)

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Template:Userspace notes Template:Other uses 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

  1. 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.”
  2. 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'.”
  3. 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.”
  4. 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.”