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Anne-Marie Slaughter

Anne-Marie Slaughter

Anne-Marie Slaughter is the Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton University. She was previously the director of policy planning for the U.S. State Department and dean of Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.
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From 2009-2011 she served as Director of Policy Planning for the United States Department of State, the first woman to hold that position. Upon leaving the State Department she received the Secretary's Distinguished Service Award, the highest honor conferred by the State Department, for her work leading the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review. She also received a Meritorious Honor Award from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). Dr. Slaughter is a frequent contributor to both mainstream and new media, publishing op-eds in major newspapers, magazines and blogs around the world and curating foreign policy news for over 8,000 followers on Twitter. She appears regularly on CNN, the BBC, NPR, and PBS, lectures widely, and has served on boards of organizations ranging from the Council of Foreign Relations and the New America Foundation to the McDonald's Corporation and the Citigroup Economic and Political Strategies Advisory Group. Foreign Policy magazine named her to their annual list of the Top 100 Global Thinkers in 2009 and 2010.

Prior to her government service, Dr. Slaughter was the Dean of Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs from 2002-2009, where she rebuilt the School's international relations faculty and created a number of new centers and programs.  She has written or edited six books, including A New World Order (2004) and The Idea That Is America: Keeping Faith with Our Values in a Dangerous World (2007), and over 100 articles. She was also the convener and academic co-chair, with Professor John Ikenberry, of the Princeton Project on National Security, a multi-year research project aimed at developing a new, bipartisan national security strategy for the United States. From 1994-2002, Dr. Slaughter was the J. Sinclair Armstrong Professor of International, Foreign, and Comparative Law and Director of the International Legal Studies Program at Harvard Law School. She received a B.A. from Princeton, an M.Phil and D.Phil in international relations from Oxford, where she was a Daniel M. Sachs Scholar, and a J.D. from Harvard. She is married to Professor Andrew Moravcsik; they live in Princeton with their two sons.

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How the World Could—and Maybe Should—Intervene in Syria

How the World Could—and Maybe Should—Intervene in Syria

Allowing the violence to go on could have worse consequences than an intervention, though only one that meets certain conditions.… More »

A New Theory for the Foreign Policy Frontier: Collaborative Power

A New Theory for the Foreign Policy Frontier: Collaborative Power

The power of many can accomplish more than any one can do alone -- and that distinction is different than the traditional classification of hard and soft power… More »

How the World Can Peacefully Intervene in Syria

How the World Can Peacefully Intervene in Syria

Preparing for civil war may be the only remaining way to avert it… More »

Getting it Done: How Civil Society Can Help Secure the U.S.-Mexico Border

Getting it Done: How Civil Society Can Help Secure the U.S.-Mexico Border

In a rapidly changing world of complex systems, small shifts can produce very big consequences. Here are some ways that local institutions and social networks are already working along the Rio Grande border… More »

Occupy Wall Street and the Arab Spring

Occupy Wall Street and the Arab Spring

Though the two movements have many differences, they share the same fundamental drivers: a deep sense of injustice and invisibility… More »

The Future of Global Connectivity

The Future of Global Connectivity

Envisioning a world in which personal mobile technology can connect every human being in every village in every country to the tap roots of knowledge, markets, services, and community… More »

Adapting U.S. Policy in a Changing International System

Adapting U.S. Policy in a Changing International System

From the Arab world protests to the abstractions of network theory, understanding the new world… More »

Reflections on the 9/11 Decade

Reflections on the 9/11 Decade

What have we learned about America and the world in the ten years since September 11, 2001?… More »

Intervention, Libya, and the Future of Sovereignty

Intervention, Libya, and the Future of Sovereignty

International law -- and the governments that bring it into being -- are the process of redefining the definition of sovereignty… More »

Hurricane Irene and American Self-Centeredness

Hurricane Irene and American Self-Centeredness

How non-Americans see our media coverage of the storm… More »

Was the Libyan Intervention Really an Intervention?

Was the Libyan Intervention Really an Intervention?

In today's world, the international community has an obligation to protect fellow citizens from governments that forfeit their legitimacy… More »

Reflections on Connections: Social Segregation and the London Riots

Reflections on Connections: Social Segregation and the London Riots

Hyper-connectedness co-exists with a growing segregation of like-minded clusters, deepening divides and giving rise to a politics of rage… More »

The Debate Is On! A Response to Dan Drezner

The Debate Is On! A Response to Dan Drezner

A colleague of mine contends that complex social factors are not a significant aspect of IR theory. Here's why he's wrong.… More »

Notes on the Rise of China

Notes on the Rise of China

For all China's potential, it faces very real obstacles that it might not be ready to acknowledge… More »

The New Foreign Policy Frontier

The New Foreign Policy Frontier

A rapidly changing world requires news ways of thinking, and new tools for understanding and engaging with societies as well as governments… More »

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