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    CURRICULUM VITAE

    Henry Richard Nau

    Professor of Political Scienceand International Affairs

    Elliott School of InternationalAffairs

    Suite 501F

    The George Washington University1957 E Street, N.W.Washington, D.C. 20052Tel: (202) 994-3167

    Fax: (202) 994-5477E-Mail: [email protected]

    Department of Political Science

    The George Washington UniversityWashington, D.C. 20052

    EDUCATION:

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts,B.S. in Economics, Politics, and Science, 1963

    Johns Hopkins University, School of Advanced International Studies,M.A. in International Relations, 1967

    Johns Hopkins University, School of Advanced International Studies,Ph.D. in International Relations, 1973

    TEACHING, RESEARCH AND OTHER EXPERIENCES:

    Present- Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, ElliottSchool of International Affairs, George Washington University(Assistant Professor, January 1973 - September 1976; AssociateProfessor, September 1976 - January 1984)

    Courses: Introduction to International AffairsU.S. Foreign PolicyIdentity and Causes of Terrorism and Major Wars

    U.S. Foreign Economic PolicyInternational Political Economy

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]
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    Sept.Sept.

    1992-1994

    On leave to write a book on American foreign policyentitledAt Home Abroad: Identity and Power in American Foreign Policy.Supported by the The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation and The CenturyFoundation (formerly The Twentieth Century Fund)

    Jan. 1988- Associate Dean, Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington

    Sept. 1992 University

    Sept.Dec.

    1987-1987

    Fellow, Foreign Policy Institute, Johns Hopkins University, School ofAdvanced International Studies (on leave from George Washington University)

    Jan. 1987- Fellow, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars,

    Sept. 1987 Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (on leave from George WashingtonUniversity)

    June 1985- Visiting Professor of International Relations, Johns Hopkins School of

    July 1985 Advanced International Studies, Washington D.C.

    JuneJuly

    1984-1984

    Course: North-South Relations

    Jan. 1981- Senior Staff Member of the National Security Council and Director of the

    July 1983 Division for International Economic Affairs (including East-West trade);White House sherpa for Ottawa (1981), Cancun (1981),

    Versailles (1982), and Williamsburg (1983) Summits (on leave from GeorgeWashington University)

    Jan. 1980- Visiting Scholar at Law and Economics Center, University of Miami Law

    Apr. 1980 School (on sabbatical from George Washington University)

    Sept. 1979- Research Associate at the Washington Center of Foreign Policy Research,

    Theories of International PoliticsInternational Organizations

    Science, Technology, and World Order

    Sept. 1989- Director, U.S.-Japan-South Korea Legislative Exchange Program, bilateral exchangePresent with Japan since 1989 and trilateral exchange adding South Korea since 2003,public

    policyprogram of the Sigur Center for Asian Studies, Elliott School of InternationalAffairs, George Washington University

    Sept. 2011- On sabbatical as W. Glenn Campbell and Rita Ricardo-Campbell National FellowJune 2012 and Susan Louise Dyer Peace National Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford

    University, Stanford, CA

    and

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    Jan. 1980 Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (on sabbatical fromGeorge Washington University)

    Sept.June

    1977-1978

    Part-time Visiting Associate Professor of Political Science, ColumbiaUniversity, New York, New YorkCourse: International Organizations

    Feb.July

    1977-1977

    Visiting Associate Professor of Political Science, Stanford University,Palo Alto, California (on leave from George Washington University)Courses: International Political Economy

    Foreign Economic Policymaking

    Sept. 1975- International Affairs Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, and Special

    Jan. 1977 Assistant to the Under Secretary for Economic Affairs, Department of State(on leave from George Washington University)

    Sept. 1975- Visiting Professor of European Studies, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced

    Jan. 1977 International Studies, Washington, D.C.Course: European Integration

    Sept. 1971- Assistant Professor of Political Science, Williams College, Williamstown,

    Jan. 1973 Massachusetts.Courses: International Politics

    American Political ProcessPolitical Economy of International Economic Relations

    Mar. 1969- Visiting Research Fellow, Forschungsinstitut der Deutschen Gesellschaft

    Oct. 1970 fuer Auswaertige Politik, Bonn, Germany

    Sept.June

    1967-

    1968

    Teaching Assistant and Seminar Leader, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced

    International StudiesCourses: U.S. Foreign Policy

    Domestic Sources of Foreign PolicyGerman Language Instruction

    JuneSept.

    1967-1967

    Marketing Research, National Cash Register Company, Augsburg, Germany

    July 1966- Intern, Department of State, Agency for International Development, Vietnam

    Sept. 1966 Bureau, Washington, D.C.

    Nov.Sept.

    1963-1965

    Lieutenant, U.S. Army, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina

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    June 1963- Research Assistant for Professor Norman J. Padelford, Center for InternationalOct. 1963 Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES:

    Member, Council on Foreign Relations (since 1975)

    Member, Board of Directors, Council for the Community of Democracies,Washington, D.C. (since 2006)

    Member, Policy Council, Una Cox Chapman Foundation, Washington, D.C., 2008-2010

    Director, US-Japan-South Korea Legislative Exchange Program, Sigur Center forAsian Studies, Elliott School ofInternational Affairs, George Washington University(since 1989)

    Member, U.S. Department of State's Advisory Committee on InternationalInvestment, 1989-1993

    Member, United Nations Committee for Development Planning, New York,1985-1992

    Member of Board of Editors and Executive Committee, International Organization,1977-1981

    Member, Program Advisory Board, Overseas Development Council, 1985-1989

    Lecturer: Foreign Service Institute, Air War College, National War College, NavalWar College, Inter-American Defense College, Air Command and Staff College,National Defense University

    Consultant, Stanford Research Institute (SRI) International, 1977-1981, 1984-1988

    Consultant, National Academy of Sciences, 1986-1990

    Consultant, National Security Council, 1983-1984

    Consultant, Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and ScientificAffairs, Department of State, 1977-1981

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    Consultant, Economic Policy Council, United Nations Association of the UnitedStates of America, 1978-1980

    Consultant, National Science Foundation, 1974-1977

    Academic Adviser, Project on the Transfer of Technology, and the U.S. PrivateSector, Fund for Multinational Management Education and Council of theAmericas (with other sponsors), 1977-1978

    AWARDS AND SCHOLARSHIPS:

    W. Glenn Campbell and Rita Ricardo-Campbell National Fellow and SusanLouise Dyer Peace Fellowship, Hoover Institution, Stanford University,September 2011-June 2012.

    Graduate student grants of $25,000 awarded annually for academic years 2008-09through 2013-14 from The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, in recognitionof my standing in the academic community, to support a PhD student in thepolitical science department. Recipients: Morgan Lyon-Cotti, Mark Romaniw.

    Graduate student fellowship grant of $25,000 for academic year 2011-12 from theRumsfeld Foundation for a PhD candidate in the political science department.Renewed 2012-13. Recipient: Thomas Hill.

    Research grant from Carnegie Corporation as co-principal investigator (with DeepaOllapally, Department of History) exploring domestic foreign policy debates in risingpowers to include India, China, Russia, Japan and Iran. July 2009, $350,000 for2009-2011; Renewed September 2011, $450,000 for 2011-2013.

    First recipient of the Harry Harding Teaching Prize at the Elliott School ofInternational Affairs, George Washington University, May 2007.

    Research grants annually ($100,000 plus) from 1989 to the present from the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission (and in 2006 from the Korea Foundation, $18,500) forsupport of the U.S.-Japan-South Korea Legislative Exchange Program, research and

    public policy program which brings together twice a year Members of the U.S.Congress, Japanese Diet, and South Korean National Assembly to discuss the rangeof issues affecting the three countries.

    Research grants from The Century Foundation, New York (formerly The TwentiethCentury Fund) and The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation (Milwaukee,Wisconsin) to write a new book on American foreign policy, Sept. 1992-Sept. 1994

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    Fellowship, Smith-Richardson Foundation, July-December 1987

    Fellowship, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars,January-August, 1987

    Superior Honor Award, Department of State, January 1977

    International Affairs Fellowship, Council on Foreign Relations (1975-1976)

    National Science Foundation Grant ST-44205 for study of Technology Transferand American Foreign Policy (1974-1975)

    Phi Beta Kappa (Awarded with Ph.D., May 1973)

    Ford Foundation Foreign Area Fellowship Grant for additional training anddissertation research (1968-1970)

    NDEA Title IV Fellowship, Johns Hopkins SAIS (1965-1968)

    Procter and Gamble Fellowship, M.I.T. (1959-1963)

    M.A. with Distinction, Johns Hopkins SAIS (1967)

    B.S. with Dean's List Honors for 8 semesters, M.I.T.(cumulative grade point average 4.4 out of 5.0)

    PUBLICATIONS:

    Books:

    Perspectives on International Relations: Power, Institutions, and Ideas (Washington,D.C.: CQ Press, 3rd Edition, 2011), 524 pp. First edition published in 2007, secondedition in 2009. Introductory textbookon international relations now used at over 250institutions, including, among others, Cornell University, Yale University, UCBerkeley, UC Irvine, UCLA, UC San Diego, Georgetown, Syracuse University,NotreDame, University of Pittsburgh, Ohio State, US Air Force Academy, US NavalAcademy, University of Florida, Texas A&M, Pepperdine, Colgate University,Wesleyan University, College of William and Mary, University of North Carolina,University of Minnesota, Free University of Berlin, and Hong Kong University.

    International Relations in Perspective: A Reader (Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 2010),764 pp. Editor and Commentator on collection of 43 seminal and relevant essays oninternational relations, a companion volume to my textbook.

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    At Home Abroad: Identity and Power in American Foreign Policy (Ithaca, NewYork: Cornell University Press, 2002), 314 pp. Also published in Japanese asAmerika no Taigai Kanyo Aidentiti to Pawa. Tokyo, Japan: Yuhikaku Press, 2006

    Trade and Security: U.S. Policies at Cross-Purposes, (Washington, D.C.:American Enterprise Institute Press, 1995), 120pp.

    The Myth of America's Decline: Leading the World Economy into the 1990s,(New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), 371 pp. Paperback with newpreface published by Oxford University Press in 1992. Also published inPortuguese, Chinese and Japanese.

    Encyclopedia of U.S. Foreign Relations, 4 Volumes. (New York: OxfordUniversity Press, 1997). Associate Editor. Sponsored by Council on Foreign

    Relations, New York.

    Domestic Trade Politics and the Uruguay Round, (New York: Columbia

    University Press, 1989), Editor and Contributor, 207pp.

    Technology Transfer and U.S. Foreign Policy, (New York: Praeger Publishers,1976), 315pp.

    National Politics and International Technology: Nuclear Reactor Developmentin Western Europe, (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1974),275pp.

    Chapters in Books:

    Realism,in Steven W. Hook and ChristopherM. Jones, eds., Routledge Handbookof American Foreign Policy (New York: Routledge, 2012), Chapter 5, pp. 61-75.

    "The Scholar and the Policy-Maker: Who Speaks Truth to Whom?"in Christian Reus-Smit (Australia National University) and Duncan Snidal(University of Chicago) eds., Oxford Handbook on International Relations(London: Oxford University Press, 2008), Chapter 36, pp. 635-648.

    Iraq and Previous Transatlantic Crises: Divided by Threat, Not Institutions orValues", in Jeffrey J. Anderson, G. John Ikenberry, and Thomas Risse, eds. TheEnd of the West? Crisis and Change in the Atlantic Order, Cornell UniversityPress, 2008, pp. 82-111.

    The Political Reasons for Global Economic Imbalances: Why Europe FinancesAmerican Military Activities Abroad and Economic Consumption at Home", in

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    Jens van Scherpenberg and Katharina Plueck, eds. Sharing the Growing EconomicBurden of World Order (Berlin, Germany: Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik,October 2006), pp. 13-20.

    Alliances or Security Community in Asia: Which Way is Bush Heading? inRobert W. Hathaway and Wilson Lee, eds., George W. Bush and Asia: A MidtermAssessment (Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson International Center forScholars, 2003), pp. 131-143.

    Identity and the Balance of Power in Asia, in G. John Ikenberry and MichaelMastanduno, eds., International Relations Theory and the Asia-Pacific (New York:Columbia University Press, 2003), pp. 213-243.

    Clintons Legacy: US trade leadership languishes in Klaus Guenter Deutsch andBernhard Speyer, eds., The World Trade Organization Millennium Round: FreerTrade in the Twenty-First Century . New York: Routledge, 2001, pp. 245-262.

    AmericasIdentity, Democracy Promotion and National Interests in Michael Cox,G. John Ikenberry and Takashi Inoguchi, eds., American Democracy Promotion:Impulses, Strategies, and Impacts. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000, pp.

    127-151.

    "Comments" on "American Social Regulation Meets the Global Economy" inPietro Nivola, ed., Comparative Disadvantage?: Social Regulations and theGlobal Economy. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1997, pp. 68-72.

    "Handel miedzynarodowy a bezpieczenstwo narodowe", in Davis B. Bobrow,Edward Halizak and Ryszard Zieba eds., Bezpieczenstwo Narodowe IMiedzynarodowe u Schylku XX Wieku, Warsaw, 1997 (Polish language).

    "Europe and America in the 1990s: no time to mothball the Atlantic partnership", inJonathan Story (ed.), The New Europe: Politics, Government, and Economy since1945. Oxford, England: Blackwell Publishers, 1993, pp. 66-91.

    "Los Estados Unidos: superpotencia lider", in Rosa Cuminsky (ed.), Mito yRealidad de la Declinacion de Estados Unidos. Mexico City: UniversidadNacional Autononade Mexico, 1992, pp. 151-161.

    "Conclusion: Export controls in a Changing Strategic Context", in Gary K.Berstch and Steven Elliott-Gower (eds.), Export Controls in Transition.Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1992, pp. 317-335.

    "Europe Can Help, But Will It?", in Mark B. Rosenberg (ed.), The ChangingHemispheric Trade Environment. Miami: Florida Atlantic University Latin

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    American and Caribbean Center, 1991, pp. 88-95.

    "Comments", in Gary Bertsch and Steven Elliott-Gower (eds.), The Impact ofGovernments on East-West Economic Relations, London: Macmillan, 1991,pp. 388-393.

    "Commentary" in Jagdish Bhagwati and Hugh T. Patrick (eds.), AggressiveUnilateralism, Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1990, pp. 232-241.

    "Rethinking Economics, Politics and Security in Europe", in Richard Perle(ed.), Reshaping Western Security: The U.S. Faces a United Europe,Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute, 1991, pp. 3-41.

    "Export Controls and Free Trade: Squaring the Circle in COCOM", in GaryBertsch (ed.), Controlling East-West Trade and Technology Transfer, Durham,N.C.: Duke University Press, 1988.

    "The United States and the NICs in the Uruguay Round: Bargaining Barriers",in John Yochelson (ed.), Keeping Pace: U.S. Policies and Global EconomicChange, Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1988.

    "Policy Comes Before Finance", in Michael T. Clark et. al., The U.S. Approach tothe Latin American Debt Crisis, Johns Hopkins University Foreign Policy Institute,Policy Study Group, February 1988, pp. 51-57. Alsopublished in Economic Impact,Vol. 4, 1988, A Quarterly Review of World Economics (published bythe United States Information Agency).

    "Bargaining in the Uruguay Round", in J. Michael Finger and Andrzej Olechowski(eds.), The Uruguay Round: A Handbook on the Multilateral Trade Negotiations,Washington, D.C.: The World Bank, 1987, pp. 75-81.

    "The West-West Dimensions of East-West Economic Relations", in Charles M.Perry and Robert L. Pfaltzgraff, Jr., (eds.), Selling the Rope to HangCapitalism, London: Pergamon-Brassey's, 1987, pp. 204-219.

    "International Technology Transfer: Security and Economic Considerations

    Under the Reagan Administration", in John R. McIntyre and Daniel S. Papp(eds), The Political Economy of International Technology Transfer, QuromBooks (Greenwood Press), 1986, pp. 61-73. Also published in an earlier version as"International Technology Transfer", The Washington Quarterly, Winter 1985,pp. 57-64, and in excerpts as "Competition vs. Coordination in TechnologyTransfer", Economic Impact, A Quarterly Review of World Economics(published by the United States Information Agency), No. 58, 2/1988, pp.44-50.

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    "National Policies for High Technology Development and Trade: AnInternational and Comparative Assessment", in Francis W. Rushing and CaroleGanz Brown (eds.), National Policies for Developing High TechnologyIndustries, Westview Press, 1986, pp. 9-31. Also published as Public PolicyProgram Working Paper 1986-1, Public Policy Program, Graduate School ofArts and Sciences, The George Washington University.

    "The NICs in a New Trade Round", in Ernest H. Preeg (ed.), Hard BargainingAhead: U.S. Trade Policy and Developing Countries, U.S. Third World PolicyPerspectives, No. 4, Overseas Development Council, Transaction Books, 1985,pp. 63-85.

    "Kernenergie: Eine Perspektive aus den USA", in Hans Ruhle (ed.), DieZukunft der Kernenergie, Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, October 1982.

    "U.S.-Mexican Oil and Gas Relations: A Special Relationship?", in RichardD. Erb (ed.), U.S.-Mexican Relations: Problems and Prospects, AmericanEnterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1981, pp. 195-212.

    "Japanese-American Relations During the 1973-74 Oil Crisis", in MichaelBlaker (ed.), Oil and the Atom: Issues in U.S.-Japan Energy Relations,East Asian Institute, Columbia University, Occasional Paper, 1980, pp. 1-37.

    "Economics, National Security and Arms Control", in John Barton andRyukichi Imai (eds.), Arms Control II: A New Approach to International

    Security, Oelgeschlager, Gunn, and Hain, 1980, pp. 113-159.

    "The Evolution of U.S. Foreign Policy in Energy: From Alliance Politics to Politics-as-Usual", in Robert M. Lawrence and Martin O. Heisler (eds.), International EnergyPolicy, Lexington Books, D.C. Heath and Co.,1980, pp. 37-65.

    "Mexican Gas: The Northern Connection', co-author with Richard R. Fagan, inRichard R. Fagan (ed.), Capitalism and the State in U.S.-Latin American

    Relations, Stanford University Press, 1979, pp. 382-424. Also published as "El GasMexicano: La Conexion del Norte", in Richard R. Fagan (ed.), estado yclases sociales en las relationes estados unidos--latinoamerica, Centro de

    Investigacion y Docencia Economicas, Mexico, 1984.

    "Technology and U.S. Foreign Energy Policy: Power and Panacea", in GeorgeS. Tolley (ed.), International Science and Technology: The Policy Gap, TheChicago Council on Foreign Relations, 1979.

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    Articles:

    The Jigsaw Puzzle and the Chess Board: The Making and Unmaking of ForeignPolicy in the Age of Obama. Commentary, 133, 5 (May 2012), pp. 13-21.

    Ideas have consequences: The Cold War and today, International Politics, 48(July/September 2011), pp. 460-481.

    No Alternative to Isms, International Studies Quarterly, 55, 2 (June 2011), pp.487-491.

    Obamas Foreign Policy: The swing away from Bush: How far to go, PolicyReview (Hoover Institution, Stanford University), No. 160, April/May 2010, pp.27-47.

    NATO: Alliance, democracy, or UN. Forum: NATO at Sixty (Spring 2009), pp.19-22. Magazine of the International Affairs Forum published by the Center for

    International Relationshttp://www.ia-forum.org/

    Conservative Internationalism: From Jefferson to Polk to Truman to Reagan.,Policy Review, N. 150, August/September 2008, pp. 3-54. (Hoover Institution,Stanford University)

    Who Speaks Truth to Whom? International Studies Review, Vol. 10,

    Issue 1 (March 2008), pp. 160-162 (abridged version of Oxford manuscript- seechapters in books).

    "Why We Fight Over Foreign Policy: Different Perspectives Yield DifferentConclusions", Policy Review, April/May 2007, pp. 25-42 (Hoover Institution,Stanford University).

    "Will the United States Withdraw from Iraq and Leave Japan Out to Dry?", JapanSpotlight: Economy, Culture and History, Vol. 25, No. 3 (May/June 2006), pp. 34-35 (A publication of the Japan Economic Foundation, Tokyo)

    "No Enemies on the Right: Conservative Foreign Policy Factions Beyond Iraq,"

    The National Interest, No. 78 (Winter 2004/05), pp.19-28.

    Japans Security Options: A Democratic Security Community in Asia? JapanSpotlight: Economy, Culture and History, Vol. 23, No. 3 (May/June 2004), pp. 24-27.(A publication of the Japan Economic Foundation, Tokyo)

    "The Truth About American Unilateralism, American Outlook, Vol. VI, No. 4

    http://www.ia-forum.org/http://www.ia-forum.org/http://www.ia-forum.org/http://www.ia-forum.org/
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    (Fall 2003), pp. 55-58. (A publication of the Hudson Institute)

    NATO and the EU: Comparative Transatlantic Security Strategies, ChallengeEurope, No. 10, June 6, 2003, 8 pp. (An online journal of the European PolicyCentre, Brussels, Belgium)

    Correspondence: Institutionalized Disagreement, International Security, Vol. 27,No. 1 (Summer 2002), pp. 178-181.

    La grande strategia Americana, iQuaderni Speciali di LIMES: Revista Italiana diGeopolitica, No. 1, 2003, pp. 61-71.

    "Alliance at Risk," The World Today (April 2002), 8 pp. Publication of RoyalInstitute for International Affairs, Chatham House.

    "Leadership is Unilateral: Bush and the War Against Terrorism", InternationalAffairs Review, XI, 1 (Winter/Spring 2002), Publication ofstudents at Elliott Schoolof International Affairs, GWU.

    "Why 'The Rise and Fall of Great Powers' Was Wrong", Review of International

    Studies, 27 (2001), 579-92. Publication of British International Studies Association.

    "Trading Troubles", National Review, Vol. XLVIII, No. 25, December 31, 1996,pp. 39-40.

    "Making U.S. Trade Policy Truly Strategic", International Journal (Summer 1994),

    40 pp.

    "The American Renaissance", CEO International Strategies, August/September1992, pp.18-21.

    "Saying No to Decline", CEO International Strategies, January/February 1991,pp. 70-73.

    "Winning the Peace", National Review, Vol. XLII, No. 5, April 1, 1991,pp. 35-37.

    "Partnerschaft in Gefahr/Amerikanisch Deutsche Wirtschaftsbeziehungen" and"Wechselseitige Wahrnemungen und Interpretationen der Wirtschaftspolitiken:Ein Abschlusskommentar", Dokumentation, Nr. 33/89, 7 August 1989, pp. 5-12and pp. 53-58 respectively. (Publication of the Academy of ProtestantChurches in the Federal Republic of Germany.)

    "The U.S. has lost its Economic Policy Compass", International Economy,

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    March-April 1988, pp. 86-92.

    "Trade Deterrence", The National Interest, No. 7, Spring 1987, pp. 48-61.Also published in Europaeische Rundschau, Vienna, Summer 1987.

    "The State of the Debate: Reaganomics...Or the Solution", Foreign Policy,Summer 1985, pp. 144-153. (A colloquy with C. Fred Bergsten on my earlierarticle in the 1984-85 Winter issue of Foreign Policy - see below).

    "Technological Cooperation and the Nation-State", co-author with James P.Lester, Western Political Quarterly, Vol. 38, No.1, March 1985, pp. 44-69.

    "Where Reaganomics Works", Foreign Policy, No. 57, Winter 1984-85,pp. 14-38. Also published simultaneously as:

    1. "La reaganomies et l'economie mondiale", Politique Etrangere,No. 4, Hiver 1984, pp. 831-851.

    2. a longer monograph entitled International Reaganomics: ADomestic Approach to World Economy, Significant Issues Series,Vol. VI, No. 18, Center for Strategic and International Studies,The Georgetown University, December 1984, 42 pp.

    3. excerpts from the monograph "A Domestic Approach to WorldEconomy", in Economic Impact, A Quarterly Review of WorldEconomics (published by the United States Information Agency),No. 51, 3/1985, pp. 8-16.

    "U.S. Energy Security Policy: Finally on Track", Geopolitics and Energy,Vol. 6, No. 9 (September 1984).

    "Comments" in Samuel P. Huntington (ed.), "National Security DecisionMaking in the White House and Its Organization", World Affairs, Vol. 146,No. 2 (Fall 1983).

    "Securing Energy", The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 4, No. 3 (Summer 1981).

    "Technology and Development in the 1980s: Is the United States Missingan Opportunity?", Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 33, No. 1,(Spring/Summer 1979).

    "From Integration to Interdependence: Gains, Losses and Continuing Gaps",A Review Essay, International Organization, Vol. 33, No.1, (Winter 1979).

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    "Continuity and Change in U.S. Foreign Energy Policy", Policy StudiesJournal, Vol. 7, No. 1, (September 1978).

    "The Diplomacy of World Food: Goals, Capabilities, Issues and Arenas",International Organization, V. 32, No. 3, Special Issue (Summer 1978). Thisvolume was also published as Raymond F. Hopkins and Donald J. Puchala(eds.), The Global Political Economy of Food, University of Wisconsin Press,1979.

    "The International Political Economy of Food and Energy", A review essay,Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 2 (Fall/Winter 1977).

    "Manufacturing Enterprise Relationships in East-West Technology Transfer:Theoretical Models and Practical Experiences", co-author Eric W. Hayden,Columbia Journal of World Business, (Fall 1975), pp. 70-83.

    "U.S. Foreign Policy in the Energy Crisis", The Atlantic Community Quarterly,Vol. 12, No. 4 (Winter 1974-75), pp. 426-439. Also published as "Diplomatic

    Uses of Technology in U.S. Energy Policy", Occasional Paper 28, NormanPatterson School of International Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada,February 1975.

    "Collective Responses to R&D Problems in Western Europe: 1955-1958 and

    1968-1973", in Ernest B. Haas and John Gerard Ruggie (eds.), "InternationalResponses to Technology", International Organization, Special Issue (Summer

    1975). This volume was awarded the Harold and Margaret Sprout Award bythe International Studies Association for the Best Book in 1975 on internationalecological topics.

    "The Practice of Interdependence in the Research and Development Sector:Fast Reactor Cooperation in Western Europe", International Organization,XXXVI (Summer 1971), pp. 507-527.

    "A Political Interpretation of the Technology Gap Dispute", Orbis, XV(Summer 1971), pp. 507-527; also published as "Die politische Bedeutungder Diskussion ueber die technologische Luecke", Europa Archiv, XXV

    (September 10, 1970), pp. 654-664.

    "A Decision-Making Analysis of the Origins of Euratom", Perspective, SAISStudent Journal, II (Spring 1968).

    "The Technology Gap: Western Europe and the United States", Perspective,SAIS Student Journal, I (Spring 1967).

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    "An Analysis of United Nations Expenses with Cost Estimates to 1975",monograph, co-author with Norman J. Padelford, Center for InternationalStudies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, (Summer 1963).

    Monographs:

    India as a Global Power: Contending Worldviews from India, Policy Report ofRising Powers Initiative, Sigur Center for Asian Studies, Elliott School ofInternational Affairs, George Washington University, March 2012, co-authored withRichard Fontaine, Center for a New American Security, 12 pp.

    Divided Diplomacy and the Next Administration: Conservative and LiberalAlternatives, co-edited with David Shambaugh andpublishedby the Elliott School ofInternational Affairs, The George Washington University, October 2004, 164 pp.

    America's Staying Power - Does Europe Need a Partner? Ernst Fraenkel Vortraegezur Amerikanischen Politik, Wirtschaft, Gesellschaft und Geschichte, John F.Kennedy-Institut fuer Nordamerikastudien der Freien Universitaet Berlin, 1993.

    The Alliance and East-West Economic Relations: Past Conflicts and PresentChoices, co-authored with Kevin Quigley, Jr.,publishedby the U.S.-Japan EconomicAgenda, a joint project of the Elliott School of International Affairs, The GeorgeWashington University, and the Carnegie Council on Ethics and InternationalAffairs, October, 1989.

    United States Technology Policy: Outlook for International Business,report prepared for SRI International, March 1988.

    U.S. Foreign Assistance: Time for Change, report of Task Force on ForeignAssistance, Foreign Policy Advisory Council to Candidate Ronald Reagan,September 1980, Chairman of Task Force and principal author.

    The Growth of U.S. and World Economics Through Technological Innovationand Transfer, report of the Technology Panel of the Economic PolicyCouncil, United Nations Association of the USA, September 1980, principal

    author and academic adviser to Panel.

    Science and Technology as Tools of Foreign Policy, report prepared by SRIInternational for the National Foreign Assessment Center, Central IntelligenceAgency, March 1980 (unclassified), principal author.

    "U.S. Policy for Technology and Development: Experience, Problems, and

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    Private Sector Role", in Public Policy and Technology Transfer: Viewpointsof U.S. Business, Vol. 4, Chapter II, published by the Fund for MultinationalManagement Education (and other sponsors), New York, New York, March1978.

    Opinion Editorials:

    "The Moral Argument for U.S. Leadership", Wall Street Journal, August 26, 1993

    "Partisan Economics", Wall Street Journal, August 22, 2002

    "Does NATO Matter Anymore?" Guardian, September 15, 2002

    "Failure to Fight Just as Risky", Baltimore Sun, March 10, 2003

    "Tribal Warfare on the Right", Los Angeles Times, November 28, 2004.

    "Bush's Classic Conservatism", International Herald Tribune, March 29, 2005

    Polk: Conservative Internationalist. The New York Sun, August 18, 2008

    How Reagan Would Have Dealt with Georgia, The Los Angeles Times, August28, 2008.

    NATO: What DirectionNext? The Washington Times, April 12, 2009.

    Lessons from the Great Expansion, Wall Street Journal, January 26, 2012.

    Papers, Seminars and Addresses (1981-present, excluding published materials cited above):

    Conservative Internationalism: What is it? Seminar Series, Department of Political

    Science, Stanford University, October 7, 2011.

    Reagan: Ideas and the End of the Cold War, Transatlantic Academy, Washington,

    D.C., March 11, 2011 sponsored by the Princeton University Project on the End of the

    Cold War Twenty Years After.

    Reagan and the Rise of Global Capitalism, at Ronald Reagan Centennial Conference,

    Reagan in a Transformed World: 1981-2011,National Press Club, Washington, D.C.,

    February 10-11, 2011, :sponsored by Miller Center of Public Affairs, University of

    Virginia.

    Global Leadership and the Promotion of Liberal Values, Council on Foreign Relations,

    Roundtable Series on Global Stakes in Human Rights, September 27, 2010.

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    Obamas Foreign Policy, The International Club, La Redoute, Bonn/BadGodesberg, Germany, June 17, 2010.

    Obamas Foreign Policy. Naval War College, Newport, RI, June 8, 2010.

    Ideas Have Consequences: The Cold War and Today, presented at Conferenceon The End of the Cold War after Twenty Years: Reconsiderations,Retrospectives, and Revisions, Princeton University, March 5-6, 2010. To bepublished in the British journal,International Politics, Summer 2011, and involume, The End of the Cold War After Twenty Years, edited by Daniel H.Deudney (Johns Hopkins University) and G. John Ikenberry (PrincetonUniversity).

    Foreign Policy Views and US Standing in the World, co-author with MatthewBaum (Harvard University) presented at the American Political ScienceAssociation Convention, Toronto, Canada, September 4, 2009.

    Reagan: His Legacy for American Foreign Policy, HooverInstitution, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, July 28, 2009.

    Keynote luncheon address entitled Obamas Foreign Policy: IsHe Neglecting Asia? at Sigur Center Conference on The Future of U.S.-TaiwanRelations, City View Room, May 19, 2009.

    World Trade, Economy and National Security, guest lecture at J.

    Dennis Hastert Center for Economics, Government and Public Policy, WheatonCollege, Wheaton. Illinois, March 26, 2009.

    Scholarship and Policy-Making: Who Speaks Truth to Whom? invited guestlecture at Fourth Annual New Era Foreign Policy Conference for political sciencegraduate and post-doctoral students from across the country, co-sponsored by

    the Elliott School, UC Berkeley and Duke University, Lindner Family Commons,Elliott School, March 23, 2009.

    Conservative Internationalism: From Jefferson to Reagan, paper presented atluncheon roundtable, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies,

    March 12, 2009.

    Bush Legacy in US foreignpolicy presented on panel with Dan Deudney,(Johns Hopkins University), John Ikenberry (Princeton), Aaron Friedberg(Princeton), and Charles Kupchan (Georgetown), Homewood Campus, JohnsHopkins University, Baltimore, MD, April 13, 2009.

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    American Views of US Standing in the World, paper co-authored with MatthewBaum (Harvard JFK School) and presented at Workshop of APSA Task Force onUS Standing in World Affairs, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, March5-6, 2009.

    American Views of Anti-Americanism: Different Schools and Interpretationspaper presented at Workshop of APSA Task Force on US Standing in WorldAffairs, APSA Headquarters, Washington, DC, November 7-8, 2008.

    Conservative Internationalism: From Jefferson to Reagan, paper presented atluncheon roundtable, the Heritage Foundation, Washington, D.C., November 6,2008.

    Conservative Internationalism: From Jefferson to Reagan, paper presented atluncheon roundtable, Hoover Institution, Washington, D.C., September 18, 2008.

    Iraq and Previous Transatlantic Crises paper presented at the BMW Center forGerman and European Studies, Georgetown University, May 9, 2008.

    Presented Paperon Conservative Internationalism: Eleven Commandments of aNew Foreign Policy Tradition at Princeton Conference on Conservatism andAmerican Foreign Policy after George W. Bush, Princeton University, May 1-3,

    2008. Hosted by Professors Aaron Friedberg and Colin Dueck

    Presented paperon Conservative Internationalism: From Thomas Jefferson toRonald Reagan at the PIPES (Program on International Political Economy andSecurity) Seminar, University of Chicago, February 14, 2008. Hosted byProfessors Charles Lipson and John Mearsheimer.

    Invited to present paperon US and Europe in the Iraq Crisis at InternationalWorkshop on US and EU perspectives on Global Issues: Transatlantic Relationsin Transition? October 26-27, 2007, College of Europe, Bruges, Belgium.

    Presented paper, "Iraq and Previous Crises: Divided by Threat Not Institutions orValues" at Centennial Conference on The Transatlantic Relationship at the Dawn ofthe New Millennium, Suffolk University, Boston, Massachusetts, March 5, 2007.

    Luncheon lecture on "Red State America: A Mystery to Europe? EuropeanMisperceptions of Conservative America", sponsored by Deutsche Gesellschaftfuer Auswaertige Politik and German Marshall Fund of the United States,Lindenlife Restaurant, Berlin, June 19, 2005.

    Lecture on "Identity and Power in US Foreign Policy" as part ofDistinguished Lecture Series on Transatlantic Relations at Swedish Institute of

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    International Affairs, Stockholm, Sweden, June 14, 2005. Roundtable Discussion10am-12 noon, and Public Lecture, 4-5:30 pm.

    Appeared live on C-Span, Washington Journal, discussing my article in TheNational Interest, January 24, 2005.

    Lecture, "Alternative Views of US Foreign Policy in Iraq", Dallas World AffairsCouncil, Dallas, Texas, January 18, 2005.

    Debate, "US Foreign Policy", New America Foundation, covered by C-Span,November 1, 2004.

    Lecture at National War College, April 15, 2004

    Lecture at Conference on Confronting Cultural Diversity in a Global World,Systems Planning Corporation, Arlington, Va., March 5, 2004.

    Do the United States and Japan Form a Security Community: Japans ExpandingSecurity Role, paper presented at a meeting of the Study Group on Redefining theUS-Japan Alliance, Tokyo, Japan, December 14-15, 2003.

    Power, Institutions and Legitimacy in Atlantic Relations,paperpresented at theGerman Marshall Fund, Washington, D.C., November 11, 2003.

    Lecture at George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, October 20, 2003

    Is the NATO Security Community Unraveling? paper presented at a meeting ofthe Transatlantic Study Group, Berlin, Germany, October 17-18, 2003.

    Lecture tour of Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany for the State DepartmentsPublic Affairs Office, June 21July, 7, 2003. Did numerous interviews with pressand radio, met with parliamentarians in Brussels and Berlin, and spoke at:

    a. America Center, Brussels, Belgiumb. Bertelsmann Foundation, Brusselsc. Vasalius College, University of Brussels

    d. Royal Institute for International Relations, Palais dEgmont, Brusselse. Robert Schuman Center, Luxembourgf. University of Potsdam, Berling. University of Berlin, Berlinh. Atlantik Bruecke, International Club, Berlini. German Society for Foreign Policy, Berlin

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    Participated in video conference with journalists in Ukraine sponsored by U.S. StateDepartments Bureau of International Information Programs, June 8, 2003.

    Lecture, War Against Iraq: Justified orNot? Baltimore Council of ForeignRelations, World Trade Center, Baltimore, Maryland, March 5, 2003.

    Lecture tour of France and Germany on my new book for the State Department'sPublic Affairs Office, May 22June 4, 2002. Spoke at:

    a. Institute for International and Strategic Relations, Paris, May 23, 2002.b. France Amerique, Paris, May 23, 2002c. Club du CEPII, Paris, May 24, 2002.d. Centre Americain de Sciences Po, Paris, May 24, 2002.e. Forschungsinstitut der Deutschen Gesellschaft fuer Auswaertige Politik, Study

    Group on Transatlantic Relations, chaired by Helga Haftendorn and KarlKaiser, May 27, 2002, and lecture for public audience, Berlin, May 28, 2002.

    f. University of Regensburg, Regensburg, May 28, 2002g. University of Munich, Munich, May 29, 2002.h. Chamber of Commerce, Leipzig, May 30, 2002.i. Cologne Press Club, Cologne, May 31, 2002.

    Appeared live on C-Span, Washington Journal, discussing my book At Home Abroad,July 28, 2002.

    Lecture, "A Structural Analysis ofAmerican Foreign Policy", Ohio State University,November8, 2002; Princeton University, November9, 2001; University of Virginia,October 21, 2001.

    Lecture, National Identity as a Sourceand a Guideto U.S. Foreign Policy,Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University, November 14,2000.

    Lecture, At Home Abroad: Identity and Power in U. S. Foreign Policy in the 21 stCentury, Weatherhead CenterforInternational Affairs, Harvard University, October13, 1998.

    Lecture, "Identity and International Politics", Department of Political Science,

    Cornell University, February 27, 1997; Dept. of Political Science and Institute ofInternational Studies, University of California, Berkeley, April 17, 1996; Dept. ofPolitical Science and Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, PrincetonUniversity, October 13, 1995.

    Lecture, "Ideas, Identity and the Illogic of Neorealism", The Center for Scienceand International Affairs, Harvard University, April 4, 1994.

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    "Identity and American Foreign Policy After the Cold War", paper presented at theannual convention of the International Studies Association, Washington, D.C., March30, 1994.

    "Identity and International Politics: An Alternative to Neorealism", paperpresented at the annual convention of the American Political ScienceAssociation, Washington, D.C., Sept. 4, 1993.

    Invited presentation on "America's Staying Power: Does Europe Need APartner?" in the Ernst Fraenkel Lecture Series, John F. Kennedy Institute,Free University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany, Oct. 13, 1992 (published as abooklet by the Free University).

    Appeared on Bill Moyer's program "Listening to America: Curing theEconomy", Public Broadcasting Station. Shown on WNET Channel 13, NewYork, June 16, 1992 and on PBS channels throughout the country.

    Lecture, "Is Neorealism Still Useful?", Program in International Politics,Economics and Security (PIPES), University of Chicago, February 13, 1992.

    Lecture, "American Foreign Policy After the Cold War", School of

    International Relations, University of Southern California, April 15, 1992.

    Keynote Address, "A New Look at American Power", Current StrategyConference, Naval War College, Newport, RI, June 18, 1991.

    Keynote Address, "Is America Finished?", Annual Meeting of the AmericanTruckers Association, Key Largo, FL, April 27, 1991.

    Keynote Address, "America and the World", German-American Conference,Konrad Adenauer Foundation, Washington, D.C., April 12, 1991.

    Keynote Address, "America Can Compete with Japan", at Fortune MagazineWorldwide Corporate Communications Conference, Palm Springs, CA,March 11, 1991.

    Keynote Address, "Is America in Decline?", the Annual Meeting of theChemical Manufacturers Association, New York, NY, Nov. 5, 1990.

    1990-91--Numerous seminars and radio programs on the new book, The Mythof America's Decline, at World Affairs Council, local Chambers of Commerceand Universities in Chicago, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Dallas, Denver, NewYork, Stanford (Conn.), Seattle, Baltimore, Atlanta and Miami.

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    Lecture on "America's Decline: Myth or Reality", Lehrman Institute, NewYork, June 26, 1990.

    Keynote address on "America's Decline: Myth or Reality?", Congress ofNeurosurgeons, Atlanta, GA, October 30, 1989.

    "U.S. Domestic Economic Policy and International Economic Performance:Ideas, Interests, and Politics", paper presented at the annual conventionof the American Political Science Association, Atlanta, GA, August 30-September 3, 1989.

    Appeared on television program, "It's Your Business" debating U.S. tradepolicy. Produced by U.S. Chamber of Commerce, June 12, 1989. AiredChannel 7, Washington, D. C. June 18, 1989.

    Appeared as special guest on Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) program, U.S.World Power: Crisis or Crossroads? Produced by Rutgers University Officeof TV and Radio, New Brunswick, NJ, April 28, 1989. Aired on Channel 13,New York, May 28, 1989.

    "Did Reaganomics Succeed? Maybe", paper presented at the annual conventionof the International Studies Association, London, England, March 30, 1989.

    Lecture on "America and the World Economy", Institute for War and PeaceStudies, Columbia University, October 13, 1988.

    Lecture on "U.S. Foreign Economic Policy" at the Institut Francais desRelations Internationales (IFRI), Paris, October 6, 1988.

    Lecture on "U.S. Foreign Economic Policy" at the European Business School,Schloss Reichartshausen, Oestrich-Winkel, Germany, October 4, 1988.

    Lecture: "American Leadership in the World Economy", Political EconomySeminar, The Center forInternational Affairs, Harvard University, March 17, 1988.

    Lecture: "The Evolution ofAmerican Foreign Economic Policy Since 1945", Foreign

    Policy Institute, Johns Hopkins University SAIS, March 9, 1988.

    "International Private Capital Flows: The Central Importance of PublicPolicy", address to the Private Sector Organization of Jamaica, Kingston,Jamaica, October 1, 1987.

    "Defining Science, Technology and International Affairs as a Sub-field",

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    comments presented to the Roundtable of Technology and the InternationalSystem, American Political Science Association Convention, Chicago,Illinois, September 4, 1987. Published as "On Technology as an IntermediateFactor", in Science, Technology and Politics, August 1988 (newsletter of theAmerican Political Science Association Section on Science and TechnologyPolicy Studies).

    "U.S. and the World Economy", lecture at the Carnegie Council on Ethics andInternational Affairs, New York, April 3, 1987.

    "Rambo and Romeo: Conflicting Motivations of U.S. Foreign EconomicPolicy", Scholl Foundation Lecture, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.,March 25, 1987.

    "Likely Impact of High Tech Competition on the East-West Technology Gapand on International Institutional, Political and Economic Relations",paper prepared for conference on Foreign Competition in Science andTechnology, George Washington University, March 23-24, 1987.

    "U.S. and the World Economy", video-taped panel discussion sponsored by the

    National Economists Club Educational Foundation, Washington, D.C.,March 16, 1987.

    "U.S. Foreign Economic Policy: Current Issues", lecture at the Universityof Paris II, March 10, 1987 and at the Institut Francais des RelationsInternationales (IFRI), March 11, 1987.

    "Domestic Trade Politics and the Uruguay Round", paper presented to theConference on Domestic Politics and the Uruguay Round, Montreux,Switzerland, March 6-8, 1987.

    "U.S. Trade and Technology Policy", series of lectures at the Tsing HuaUniversity, Beijing, China, October 17-25, 1986, sponsored by the EconomicDevelopment Institute, World Bank.

    "America's Foreign Trade Policy", video-taped television program sponsored bythe Foreign Service History Center, GWU TV Station, September 26, 1986.

    "Is Europe Pushing the United States Toward the Pacific", presentation toConference on Pacific/Atlantic Relations, Institute for International Studies,University of California, Berkeley, April 26, 1986.

    "U.S. Foreign Economic Policy", lecture at INSEAD (European Institute ofBusiness Administration) Fontainbleau, France, October 11, 1985.

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    "U.S. Role in the Multilateral Development Banks," Testimony before theSubcommittee on International Development Institutions and Finance,Committee on Banking, Finance, and Urban Affairs, U.S. House ofRepresentatives, U.S. Congress, July 18, 1985.

    "Technological Protectionism in the United States: A Way Out", paperpresented to Workshop on International Technology Transfer: Promotionand Barriers, sponsored by Six Countries' Programme on Aspects ofGovernment Policies Toward Technological Innovation in Industry, Ottawa,Canada, May 6-7, 1985.

    "Multilateral Development Banks", Testimony before the Subcommittee onForeign Operations, Committee on Appropriations, U.S. House ofRepresentatives, March 27, 1985.

    Lecture: "Reaganomics and the World Economy", Seminar at the Center forInternational Affairs, Harvard University, February 26, 1985.

    "The Magic of Hard Work: Foreign Assistance and the Private SectorUnder the Reagan Administration", Address before the Conference on U.S.Corporations and International Health, Newport Beach, CA, December 8-9,1983.

    "International Peaceful Nuclear Cooperation in Global Perspective", paperpresented at Third Japanese-German-American Conference on The Future ofNuclear Power, Nara, Japan, Aug. 22-24, 1983.

    "U.S. Policy at the Williamsburg Summit: A Preview", Address at theEuropean Institute of Public Administration, Maastricht, Holland, May 8,1983.

    "Economics and Security in Alliance and East-West Relations", Address atthe Institute for Economic Research, Hamburg, Germany, February 11, 1983.Also published by U.S. Information Agency, April 1, 1983.

    "U.S. East-West Trade Policy", Lecture at the Institute Francais des Relations

    Internationales (IFRI), Paris, France, February 8, 1983.

    "The GATT Ministerial: An Appraisal", Address before the U.S. Council onInternational Business, New York, NY, December 1, 1982.

    "Reagan Administration Foreign Assistance Policy, Address to the AnnualMeeting of the Society for International Development, Washington, D.C.,

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    May 21, 1981.

    Revised May 2012