Spencer A. Klavan
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Spencer A. Klavan
Summary
Spencer A. Klavan is a human[1]. He worked as a researcher[2].
Key Facts
- Spencer A. Klavan held citizenship in United States[3].
- Spencer A. Klavan worked as a researcher[2].
- Spencer A. Klavan was employed by The American Mind[4].
- Spencer A. Klavan was employed by Claremont Institute[5].
- Spencer A. Klavan was educated at University of Oxford[6].
- Spencer A. Klavan's doctoral advisor was Dirk Obbink[7].
- Spencer A. Klavan's doctoral advisor was Armand D'Angour[8].
- Spencer A. Klavan's image is recorded as Spencer Klavan.jpg[9].
- Spencer A. Klavan is recorded as male[10].
- Spencer A. Klavan's instance of is recorded as human[11].
- Spencer A. Klavan's family name is recorded as Klavan[12].
- Spencer A. Klavan's given name is recorded as Spencer[13].
- Spencer A. Klavan's given name is recorded as A.[14].
- Spencer A. Klavan's academic thesis is recorded as Melody and meaning: the semiotics of ancient Greek music in the late classical and early Hellenistic eras[15].
- Spencer A. Klavan's Scopus author ID is recorded as 57211859906[16].
- Spencer A. Klavan's Semantic Scholar author ID is recorded as 122492275[17].
- Spencer A. Klavan's LinkedIn personal profile ID is recorded as spencer-klavan-0a963631[18].
Body
Education
Spencer A. Klavan was educated at University of Oxford[6]. Doctoral advisors include Dirk Obbink[7], a papyrologist[19], b. 1957[20], of United States[21], awarded the MacArthur Fellows Program[22], specialised in classical philology[23] and Armand D'Angour[8], a classical scholar[24], b. 1958[25], of United Kingdom[26].
Career and Affiliations
Spencer A. Klavan worked as a researcher[2]. Employers include The American Mind[4], an online magazine[27] and Claremont Institute[5], a nonprofit organization[28], in United States[29], founded in 1979[30], headquartered in Upland[31].
FAQs
What did Spencer A. Klavan do for work?
Spencer A. Klavan worked as researcher[2].
Where did Spencer A. Klavan go to school?
Spencer A. Klavan was educated at University of Oxford[6].