Stewart McClellan Patrick_rhodes1988.jpg

Stewart McClellan Patrick (Rhodes 1988)

Council on Foreign Relations. Stanford University. Rhodes Scholar, University of Oxford.

Academic Council of the United Nations System, American Political Science Association, International Studies Association. United States Institute of Peace (USIP): former Grant Review Panelist.[2]

1 Jun 2020 - CFR, U.S. Foreign Policy - Under Trump, the United States Has Become an Irresponsible Stakeholder

U.S. President Donald J. Trump’s disdain for multilateral cooperation has cost the United States its credibility as a responsible stakeholder in the international system. Blog Post by Stewart M. Patrick.[3]

May 2008 to Present - Council on Foreign Relations.**

Senior Fellow and Director, Program on International Institutions and Global Governance. Direct a major new Council initiative to examine the institutional requirements for world order in the twenty-first century, including the multilateral frameworks governing international conduct across a wide array of regions and issue areas.[2]

2007 - Member, Task Force on Genocide Prevention, US Holocaust Memorial Museum.[2] See Donald Etra (S&B 1968)

2007 - Member, Task Force on A Unified Security Budget for the United States.[2]

2006 to 2008 - Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. Professorial Lecturer in International Relations/Conflict Management. Taught graduate course in Post-Conflict Reconstruction to M.A. candidates.[2]

Feb 2005 to Apr 2008 - Center for Global Development. Research Fellow and Director, Project on Weak States and U.S. National Security. Washington, D.C.. Directed the Center’s research and policy engagement on the intersection between security and development, with particular focus on the relationship between weak states and transnational threats and on the policy challenges of building effective institutions of governance in fragile settings.[2]

2005 to 2006 - Member, Princeton Project on U.S. National Security.[2]

2005 - Superior Honor Award, U.S. Department of State, for exceptional contributions to the establishment of the Office of the Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization.[2]

2005 - Franklin Award, U.S. Department of State, for work on Afghanistan regional development forum.[2]

2004 - National Intelligence Council: Steering Group Member, Global Trends 2020.[2]

2004 - Center for Global Development: Advisor, Commission on Weak States and U.S. National Security.[2]

2004 - Defense Science Board: State Department representative, Panel on Post-Conflict Activities.[2]

2004 - Council on Foreign Relations: Observer, Independent Task for on United States Post-Conflict Capabilities.[2]

Sep 2002 to Jan 2005 - Secretary of State’s Policy Planning Staff, U.S. State of Department, Secretary of State, Colin Powell (CFR. Pershing Rifles) by President George W. Bush (S&B 1968).

Served as lead professional staff member for U.S. policy toward Afghanistan and global/transnational issues. Portfolio responsibilities included analysis and recommendations for U.S. policies on failed/failing states and post–conflict reconstruction; sustainable development; refugees and migration; international law enforcement; and global health affairs. Joined staff as an International Affairs Fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations.[2]

2002 to 2003 - International Affairs Fellowship, Council on Foreign Relations.[2]

2001 to 2002 - Politics Department, New York University. Adjunct Professor of Politics. Taught U.S Foreign Policy to NYU graduate students.[2]

1997 to 2002 - Center on Internation Cooperation, New York University. Research Associate. New York, NY. Designed and ran research programs on Post-Conflict Reconstruction and on Multilateralism and U.S. Foreign Policy.[2]

1999 to 2004 - Term Membership, Council on Foreign Relations.[2]

1996 - D.Phil in International Relations.Dissertation: Forging Hegemonic Consensus: America, France, and the Making of the Postwar Order, 1945-1954.[2]

1993 - Guest Researcher Fellowship, Norwegian Nobel Institute, Oslo, Norway.[2]

Jun to Dec 1993 - The Norwegian Nobel Institute. Guest Researcher, Oslo, Norway.[2]

Summer 1992 - Central European University. Tutor in International Politics, Prague, Czech Republic.[2]

1992 to 1994 - Research Fellowship in Foreign Policy Studies, The Brookings Institution.[2] Pre-Doctoral Dissertation Fellow in Foreign Policy Studies. Washington, DC.[2]

1991 to 1992 - Lecturer in International Politics. Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University.[2] Nuffield Funded Studentship and Overseas Research Award, Oxford University.[2]

Summer 1991 - Center for Strategic and International Studies. Consultant, Political-Military Affairs, Washington, DC.[2]

1991 - M.Phil in International Relations, with distinction. Thesis: The Concept of Hegemony in InternationalRelations: A Critical Reassessment. Fields of specialization: International Politics since 1900, Politics and Institutions of West European Integration, International Relations Theory, Classical Theories of International Relations.[2]

Summer 1989 - Research Assistant, Latin American Studies Program.[2]

1989 - M.ST.(Master of Studies), Modern European History , with special commendation.[2]

1988 to ? - Rhodes Scholar, St. John’s College, University of Oxford.[1] Elected from the state of Maryland.[2]

1987 to 1988 - Standford University. Head Teaching Assistant, Human Biology Program.[2]

Summers 1987, 1988 - Institute of Human Origins. Paleoanthropologist, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania.[2]

1987 - Golden Medal for excellence in undergraduate research, Stanford University.[2]

1987 - Hedley Prize for contributions to the Humanities Honors Program, Stanford University.[2]

1987 - Stanford University, Stanford, California.(B.A. HUMAN BIOLOGY), with distinction, and with Honors in Humanities. Honors Thesis: Toward a Systematic Evolutionary View of Human Culture.[2]

1986 - Phi Beta Kappa, junior year induction, Stanford University.[2]

1983 - Moorhead Scholarship (declined), University of North Carolina, 1983 National Merit Scholar, St. Albans School, Washington, DC.[2]

[1] - Rhodes Database

[2] - CFR C.V.

[3] - CFR - Under Trump, the United States Has Become an Irresponsible Stakeholder by Stewart McClellan Patrick

[4] - The Best Laid Plans: The Origins of American Multilateralism and the Dawn of the Cold War by Stewart Patrick (2008)

[5] - Multilateralism and U.S. Foreign Policy: Ambivalent Engagement (Center on International Cooperation Studies in Multilateralism) (2002)

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