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Global Theory & History | Faculty

Charles Doran
Andrew W. Mellon Professor of International Relations; Director of the Center of Canadian Studies

Areas of Expertise: Canada; Middle East; Persian Gulf; aid and American foreign policy; international economic issues; energy and resource issues; oil politics; OPEC; international political economy; international relations; military power and strategy; negotiation and conflict resolution; NAFTA; political risk analysis

Background and Education: Former professor and director of international management program at Rice University; has directed major research projects on North American Trade, Canada-U.S. relations, Persian Gulf Security and U.S.-German-Japanese relations; regular adviser to business and government, and has provided congressional briefings and testimony on trade, security and energy policy; Ph.D., political science, The Johns Hopkins University

Publications: Democratic Pluralism at Risk: Why Canadian Unity Matters, and Why Americans Care (2001); The NAFTA Puzzle (1994); Systems in Crisis: New Imperatives of High Politics at Century's End (1991); The Gulf, Energy and Global Security: Political and Economic Issues (1991); Forgotten Partnership: U.S.-Canada Relations Today (1983); Myth, Oil and Politics (1978); The Politics of Assimilation: Hegemony and Its Aftermath (1971); more than 75 refereed articles

Contact Information:
Room: Nitze 510
Phone: (202) 663-5715
Email: cfdoran@jhu.edu

Jakub Grygiel
Associate Professor of International Relations

Areas of Expertise: European security issues; American foreign policy; strategic and security issues; international relations

Background and Education: Former consultant to OECD and World Bank; columnist for Swiss and Italian newspapers; Ph.D., Princeton University

Publications: To Survive, Decentralize! The Barbarian Threat and State Decentralization (2010)

Contact Information:
Room: N506
Phone: 202.663.5735
Email: jgrygiel@jhu.edu
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David Calleo
Dean Acheson Professor and Director of European Studies Program

Areas of Expertise: Western Europe, Atlantic and Eurasian relations; France; Germany; Great Britain; Italy; American foreign policy; diplomatic history; economics; American economic policy; international economic issues; international political economy; international relations; military power and strategy; NATO; strategic and security issues

Background and Education: Named JHU University Professor; taught at Brown, Yale and Columbia universities, the College of Europe and the universities of Bonn and Munich, the University of Puget Sound, the Institut d'Etudes Politiques in Paris and the Institut Universitaire de Hautes Etudes Internationales (IUHEI) in Geneva; member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the International Institute for Strategic Studies; past Rockefeller, Guggenheim and Fulbright fellow; former associate at the Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Internationales (CERI); twice project director for the Twentieth Century Fund; former research fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford; served as a consultant to the U.S. undersecretary of State for Political Affairs; Ph.D., political science, Yale University

Publications: Several books, including Rethinking Europe's Future (2001); The Bankrupting of America: How the Federal Deficit is Impoverishing the Nation (1992); Beyond American Hegemony: The Future of the Western Alliance (1987); The Imperious Economy (1982); The German Problem Reconsidered (1978); America and the World Political Economy (with Benjamin M. Rowland, 1973); numerous articles in journals and other publications

Contact Information:
Room: Rome 520
Phone: (202) 663-5796
Email: dcalleo@jhu.edu

William A. Douglas, Ph.D
Interim Director of the International Development Program and Professional Lecturer

An educator trained in the field of international relations, specializing in democracy in developing countries, international labor affairs and international ethics. He has taught university students at SAIS, adults in a mid-career graduate program at Georgetown University, foreign visitors to the United States, U.S. Foreign Service officers and Latin American, African and East European trade unionists. He has more than three decades of pratical experience in international labor affairs, and has lived and worked in Asia, Europe, Latin America, where he has twice been a Fullbright Lecturer in Korea.

Dr. Douglas received his Ph.D. in politics from Princeton University.

Francis Winters (Ph. D., Fordham University and Union Theological Seminary)
Professor Emeritus, Ethics and International Relations
The School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University

Francis Winters has specialized on the complex relationship between conscience and nuclear deterrence throughout his career of 35 years as a professor in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University.  His latest study on the problem, Remembering Hiroshima : Was It Just? (Ashgate, 2009), is available on electronic reserves at SAIS, for use in this course.

After publishing, with Harold P. Ford, a conference study, Ethics and Nuclear Strategy? (Orbis, 1977), he was appointed a consultant to the American Roman Catholic Bishops Conference as they prepared their report on the ethics of nuclear deterrence, “The Challenge of Peace” (1983). His reports on this radical document appeared in Etudes (Paris) [a study discussed in Le Monde, August 25, 1982]; Theological Studies; Science, Technology and Human Values;  the Review of Politics; Survival; Commentary; Die Presse (Vienna); La Liberation (Paris); and The Times (London).

On the basis of these studies, he was invited to lecture on the problems of ethics and deterrence at the Army War College (1976-1988), the Naval War College, The National War College, the Central Intelligence Agency, the American Political Science Association, the Chatauqua Institution, the U.S. Southern Command (Panama City, Panama), the University of Alaska, Harvard University, Louvain University and the U.S. Naval Academy.

In 1986, he was elected to the Council on Foreign Relations and the International Institute of Strategic Studies.

 

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 For more information on the SAIS Global Theory & History Program, please contact: 

Charles Doran
Director

Starr Lee
Program Coordinator
202.663.5714
202.663.5717 fax
slee255@jhu.edu