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David Unger
Adjunct professor of American Foreign Policy (Fall Semester)
Editorial Board, The New York Times; Council on Foreign Relations
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Background and Education
Council on Foreign Relations (member since 1989); Foreign Policy Roundtable, NYC - Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs (1977-2007) presenter and discussion leader - Wealth and Terror: Why America’s Quest for Absolute Security Is a Mission Impossible that Can Also Destroy Our Democracy (2007), Maps of War, Maps of Peace: Finding a Two-State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Question (2002); guest seminar leader, Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, on Obama and U.S. Foreign Policy (Nov., 2008); Ph. D. , University of Texas at Austin, A.B. History and Comparative Literature, Cornell University, further graduate studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Institute for Historical Research, University of London
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Publications
The Emergency State:How to End America’s Obsessive Quest for National Security and Reclaim our Democracy, Penguin Press (Feb 2012); Review of Innocent Abroad, in The New York Times Book Review (Feb 1, 2009); more than 3,000 foreign policy editorials published in The New York Times since 1977; “The Inevitable Two State Solution,” in World Policy Journal (Fall 2008); “Maps of War, Maps of Peace: Finding a Two-State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Question,” in World Policy Journal (Summer 2002); “Asian Anxieties, Pacific Overtures: Experiments in Security for a New Asia-Pacific Community,” in World Policy Journal (Summer 1994)
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Languages
English
French
Spanish
Italian
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Classes
Policies and Politics of the American Emergency State
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