Patricia Schroeder
President
and Chief Executive Officer
Former
Congresswoman Patricia Scott Schroeder is President and Chief Executive
Officer of the Association of American Publishers (AAP), the national
trade organization of the U.S. book publishing industry, a post she assumed
on June 1, 1997. Mrs. Schroeder left Congress
undefeated in 1996 after representing Colorado’s First Congressional
District (Denver) in the United States House of Representatives for 24
years. For a brief period of time in 1986, she considered running
for President but withdrew for lack of funds despite the fact that she
ranked third in a Time magazine poll.
January to June 1997, she held the rank of Professor at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. In addition to heading the AAP, Mrs. Schroeder is the Vice Chair of the Marguerite Casey Foundation Board of Directors, she serves on the American Bar Association’s Center for Human Rights Executive Committee, and is the Chair of the Council for a Livable World’s PeacePAC. She also serves on various advisory committees dealing with literacy and issues affecting children and women.
Born in Portland, Oregon in 1940, Mrs. Schroeder graduated magna cum
laude in 1961 from the University of Minnesota while working as
an insurance claims adjuster to support herself through college. Mrs.
Schroeder went on to Harvard Law School, one of only 15 women in a class
of more than 500 men. She earned her J.D. in 1964 and moved to
Denver, Colorado with her husband, James, who in 1972 encouraged her
to challenge an incumbent Republican for the House seat representing
Colorado's First Congressional District.
The mother of two young children at the time she was elected to the House,
Mrs. Schroeder went on to serve 12 terms. During her tenure
in the House, she became the Dean of Congressional Women, co-chaired
the Congressional Caucus on Women's Issues for 10 years, and served on
the House Judiciary Committee, the Post Office and Civil Service Committee,
and was the first woman to serve on the House Armed Services Committee. As
chair of the House Select Committee on Children, Youth and Families from
1991 to 1993, Mrs. Schroeder guided the Family and Medical Leave Act
and the National Institutes of Health Revitalization Act to enactment
in 1993, a fitting legislative achievement for her lifetime of work on
behalf of women's and family issues. She was also active on many
military issues, expediting the National Security Committee's vote to
allow women to fly combat missions in 1991 and working to improve the
situation of military families through passage of her Military Family
Act in 1985.
A leader in the cause of education and a champion of free speech, Mrs.
Schroeder was never a single-issue candidate. As Ranking
Member of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts and Intellectual
Property she was one of the most knowledgeable members of Congress on
copyright issues and a strong advocate for protecting intellectual property
rights and for reinforcing the creative incentive for developing intellectual
property. She continues this advocacy in her leadership of AAP.
Mrs. Schroeder is the author of two books: Champion of the Great
American Family (Random House, 1989) and 24 Years of House Work...and
the Place Is Still a Mess (Andrews McMeel, 1998). She is in the
National Women’s Hall of Fame and the Colorado Women’s Hall
of Fame. In 2008 Mrs. Schroeder was presented with the Winn Newman Lifetime Achievement Award from the Americans for Democratic Action.
Photo credit: Kenny Johnson
