ICAS Bulletin
Institute for Corean-American Studies, Inc.
Patrick M Cronin
Senior Vice President and Director of Studies
Center for Strategic and Interantional Studies
to speak
United States Foreign
Policy in East Asia: The Korean Peninsula and Regional Stability
ICAS Winter Symposium: Humanity, Peace and Security
February 24, 2005 Thursday 12:30 PM - 4:30 PM
U S Senate Dirksen Building Room SD 226
Capitol Hill, Washington D C 20510
Dear Friend:
We are pleased to share with
you that Patrick M Cronin will present "United States Foreign Policy Tradition in
the East Asia: The North Korea's Nuclear Issues and The US - South Korea" at the
ICAS Winter Symposium 2005.
The Honorable Patrick M. Cronin joined CSIS in October
2003 as senior vice president and director of studies. Dr. Cronin is also Executive
Director of the Hills Program on Governance. Previously, Patrick served as assistant
administrator for policy and program coordination at the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID). At USAID, he was responsible for developing and coordinating
policy with the interagency and international community, as well as managing the
agency's multibillion-dollar budget. Patrick was also dual-hatted by the White House
to chair an interagency task force to design a new development agency (the Millennium
Challenge Corporation) spending up to $5 billion a year to promote economic growth
in developing countries committed to good governance. Prior to that, he served as
director of research and studies at the U.S. Institute of Peace, and from 1990 until
1997, Patrick held various positions at the National Defense University's Institute
for National Strategic Studies, including head of Asian studies, director of research,
and deputy director of the Institute. At the same time, he helped create Joint Force
Quarterly and was the journal's first executive editor. Upon his departure, Patrick
received the U.S. Army's Civilian Meritorious Service Award. He has been an analyst
at the Center for Naval Analyses and has worked at SRI International and the Congressional
Research Service. Patrick had also taught at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced
International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University and at the University of
Virginia. He was a commissioned officer in the U.S. Naval Reserve (intelligence)
from 1987 until 2000. Patrick attended Oxford University, where he earned both D.Phil.
and M.Phil. degrees in international relations, and the University of Florida, where
he received the Weimer Award for Outstanding Graduate. His publications include
The United States and Coercive Diplomacy (U.S. Institute of Peace, 2003), The U.S.-Japan
Alliance: Past, Present and Future (Council on Foreign Relations, 1999), 2015: Power
and Progress (National Defense University Press, 1996), Redefining the U.S.-Japan
Alliance (National Defense University Press, 1994), and From Globalism to Regionalism:
New Perspectives on U.S. Foreign and Defense Policies (National Defense University
Press, 1993). Patrick has served on the editorial advisory boards of a number of
journals, including International Studies Perspectives and the International Journal
of Korean Studies and was an associate editor of Strategic Review.
Admission to
this programme is free of charge and open to public. However, seating is limited
and pre-registration is advised. Please register on-line at:
On-Line Registration
Regards,
Sang Joo Kim / signed
Sr. Fellow & Executive Vice President
ICAS
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