John DeGioia | |
|---|---|
DeGioia in 2016 | |
| 48thPresident of Georgetown University | |
| In office July 1, 2001 – November 21, 2024 | |
| Preceded by | Leo J. O'Donovan |
| Succeeded by | Eduardo Peñalver |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1957 (age 67–68) Connecticut, U.S. |
| Spouse | |
| Education | Georgetown University (BA,MA,PhD) |
| Academic background | |
| Thesis | The Moral Theories of Charles Taylor and Alasdair MacIntyre and the Objective Moral Order (1995) |
| Doctoral advisor | Terry Pinkard |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Philosophy |
| Institutions | Georgetown University |
John Joseph DeGioia (born 1957) is an American academic administrator and philosopher who served as thepresident of Georgetown University from 2001 to 2024. He was the firstlay president of the school and its longest-serving president. Upon his appointment, he also became the first lay president of anyJesuit university in the United States. Having spent his entire career at Georgetown, where he received his undergraduate and graduate degrees, DeGioia was the dean of student affairs and held various vice presidential positions before becoming president.
John Joseph DeGioia was born inConnecticut in 1957,[1] and was raised inOrange, Connecticut, andHanford, California.[2] He attendedAmity Regional High School inWoodbridge, Connecticut, graduating in 1975.[3] He then attendedGeorgetown College atGeorgetown University, where he majored in English.[4] DeGioia also played sports and founded the Georgetown chapter of theFellowship of Christian Athletes.[5] He graduated with aBachelor of Arts in 1979.[4]
Upon graduation, DeGioia became a hall director at one of Georgetown's freshman dormitories,New South Hall.[4] In 1982, he became an assistant to university presidentTimothy S. Healy, where he oversaw the office of the president. Three years later he was named dean of student affairs, during which time he led the university's committee on free speech, expanded the university's psychological and counseling services, and implemented a program to track the performance of student athletes. He also participated in two fundraising campaigns, one of which raised money for the construction of theLeavey Center.[6] As dean of student affairs, he also was involved in the conflicts over Georgetown'sCatholic identity during the tenure of Healy's successor,Leo J. O'Donovan. DeGioia was criticized by some Catholics for allowing the formation of a studentabortion rights group in 1991.[7] The funding for the group was later revoked due to three events that DeGioia claimed advocated for abortion, violating the terms he had set out for the club.[8]
O'Donovan named DeGioia the associate vice president and chief administrative officer ofGeorgetown's main campus in 1992.[6] DeGioia received hisDoctor of Philosophy inphilosophy from the university'sGraduate School of Arts and Sciences in 1995.[4] He has taught undergraduates at the university as a professor of philosophy since that time.[6]
That same year, DeGioia was promoted to vice president, overseeing all operations of the main campus, including the university's finances, undergraduate admissions, financial aid, athletics, and student affairs. He was promoted to senior vice president in 1998, where he was responsible for all university-wide operations. In this capacity, he managed theGeorgetown Medical Center's financial and academic strategy,[6] and ultimately negotiated the sale of theGeorgetown University Hospital toMedStar Health in 2000, while retaining university ownership of theSchool of Medicine.[4]

On July 1, 2001, DeGioia became the president of Georgetown University.[2] Succeeding O'Donovan, upon his appointment, DeGioia became the firstlay president of anyJesuit university in the United States.[9] It was the board of directors' initial intention to hire a Jesuit for the job, but they determined that there was not a suitable candidate for the office.[10] In hisinauguration speech on October 14, DeGioia expressed his commitment to carrying on the Jesuit tradition of the university.[7] Upon assuming office, he oversaw the successful completion of a $1 billion fundraising campaign (equivalent to $1.8 billion in 2024),[11] which the board of directors had begun in 1995.[10][12] DeGioia began another major fundraising campaign in 2011, which reached its goal of $1.5 billion in 2015 (equivalent to $2 billion in 2024),[11] one year ahead of schedule.[13]
A number of construction projects were undertaken during DeGioia's presidency. He assumed office midway through the construction of the Southwest Quadrangle, and oversaw its completion.[14] Additionally, a new, 154,000-square-foot (14,300 m2) science building, Regents Hall, opened in 2012,[15] and the John R. Thompson, Jr. Intercollegiate Athletic Center opened in 2016.[16]
Several new academic components were created during his tenure. The largest of these were theGeorgetown campus in Qatar, which opened in 2005, and theMcCourt School of Public Policy, which was founded in 2013. Permanent programs also were established inShanghai andLondon.[17]
DeGioia was involved in several controversies as president. In 2012, he publicly came to the defense of a student at theGeorgetown University Law Center,Sandra Fluke, following her testimony before theU.S. House of Representatives in support of theAffordable Care Act'scontraceptive mandate, when political punditRush Limbaugh madedisparaging comments about her.[18] That same year, DeGioia was criticized by prominent Catholics, including theArchbishop of Washington, CardinalDonald Wuerl, for Georgetown's invitation ofKathleen Sebelius, theSecretary of Health and Human Services and author of the contraceptive mandate, to be honored as a graduation speaker.[19] This promptedWilliam Peter Blatty, a Georgetown alumnus, to file acanon lawsuit with the Vatican, requesting that it order the university to comply withEx corde Ecclesiae.[20]
In 2016, DeGioia convened a systemic study of and apology for the university's19th-century connection to slavery.[17]
DeGioia became the longest-serving president in Georgetown's history in 2014.[4] On June 5, 2024, he suffered astroke and was in stable condition after prompt medical intervention.[21] On November 21, 2024, DeGioia announced that he would resign as president to focus on his recovery. He will hold the title of president emeritus and will remain a member of the faculty.[22]
In addition to his role as university president, DeGioia is involved in a number of national education organizations. He has been the chair of the board of directors of theAmerican Council on Education and the Forum for the Future of Higher Education, and the chair of the board of governors of theNational Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). He has been a member of the boards of directors of theCarnegie Corporation of New York and theNational Association of Independent Schools, as well as a commissioner of theKnight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. He is a member of theWorld Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on Values and WEF's Global University Leaders Forum.[2]
DeGioia was presented the "Lifetime Achievement Award for Excellence in Academia" by theOrder Sons of Italy in America in 2004,[23] and the "Catholic in the Public Square Award" byCommonweal magazine in 2012.[24] He was named "Washingtonian of the Year" byWashingtonian magazine in 2008,[25] and a "Brave Thinker" byThe Atlantic in 2012.[26]
DeGioia was inducted into the Amity Regional High School hall of honor in 2006.[3] In 2010, he was elected a member of theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has receivedhonorary degrees fromMiami Dade College in 2008,Loyola University Maryland in 2009,Queens University Belfast in 2009,Sacred Heart University in 2011,Mount Aloysius College in 2015, andSeattle University in 2016. In addition, he has received an honorary fellowship atWrexham Glyndŵr University in 2010, and the "Esteemed Friend" award fromSophia University inTokyo in 2014.[2] He has been a member of the U.S. National Commission forUNESCO.[27]
DeGioia's father, John G. DeGioia, worked as a customer service specialist for a Connecticut manufacturing company. His mother taught gifted students in the Hanford, California,public schools.[28]
On November 5, 1994, DeGioia married Theresa Anne Miller, a 1989 graduate of Georgetown University.[28] Both Catholic,[29] they weremarried atHoly Trinity Church in theGeorgetown neighborhood, in a ceremony presided over by DeGioia's uncle and Jesuit priest, John J. Begley.[28] They have one son.[5] DeGioia is a member of theOrder of Malta.[17]
| Academic offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | 48thPresident of Georgetown University 2001–2024 | Succeeded by – |