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David Unger, Ph.D.

Adjunct Professor of American Foreign Policy

Based in Bologna, Italy
Bologna Center 211

Background and Education

A New York Times Editorial Board member as well as member of the Council on Foreign Relations; previously a member of the Foreign Policy Roundtable; presenter and discussion leader at the Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs on Wealth and Terror: Why America’s Quest for Absolute Security Is a Mission Impossible that Can Also Destroy Our Democracy and Maps of War, Maps of Peace: Finding a Two-State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Question; previously a guest seminar leader at the Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy on Obama and U.S. Foreign Policy; Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin

RSS

"The U.N.'s Lost Decade" in Croatia UNA Magazine (2012); "A Better Internationalism" in World Policy Journal (2012); The Emergency State: How to End America’s Obsessive Quest for National Security and Reclaim our Democracy (2012); "Economic Leadership in Europe" in Bologna Center Journal of International Affairs (2011); Review of Innocent Abroad, in The New York Times Book Review (2009); "The Inevitable Two State Solution" in World Policy Journal (2008); "Maps of War, Maps of Peace: Finding a Two-State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Question" in World Policy Journal (2002); "Asian Anxieties, Pacific Overtures: Experiments in Security for a New Asia-Pacific Community" in World Policy Journal (1994); more than 3,000 foreign policy editorials published in The New York Times since 1977

  1. January 6, 2013 | International.org

    David Unger, an adjunct professor in the America Foreign Policy Program at the SAIS Bologna Center, was quoted in a International.org article titled, “Obama’s Asia Pivot in 2013.” Read more
  2. December 6, 2012 | The New York Times, The Opinion Pages

    David Unger, Adjunct Professor of American Foreign Policy, comments in The New York Times Opinion Pages in an article titled, "Freedom of the Press for Posterity." Read summary Read more
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United States
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American Foreign Policy
Foreign Languages
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