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facts about anne marie slaughter.html

34 Facts About Anne-Marie Slaughter

facts about anne marie slaughter.html1.

Anne-Marie Slaughter was born on September 27,1958 and is an American international lawyer, foreign policy analyst, political scientist, and public commentator.

2.

Anne-Marie Slaughter is a former president of the American Society of International Law and the current president and CEO of New America.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter was born and raised in Charlottesville, Virginia, the daughter of a Belgian mother, Anne Marie Denise Limbosch, and an American father, Edward Ratliff Anne-Marie Slaughter Jr.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter is married to Princeton politics professor Andrew Moravcsik, with whom she has two children: Alex and Michael Moravcsik.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter is a 1976 graduate of St Anne's-Belfield School in Charlottesville, Virginia.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter continued at Harvard as a researcher for her academic mentor, international lawyer Abram Chayes.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter received honorary degrees from the University of Miami in 2006, the University of Warwick in 2013, and Tufts University in 2014.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter won the University of Virginia's Thomas Jefferson Medal in 2007.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter then moved to Princeton to serve as dean of the Woodrow Wilson School, the first woman to hold that position.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter held that post from 2002 to 2009, when she accepted an appointment at the US State Department.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter was director of the International Legal Studies Program at Harvard Law School from 1994 to 2002, and a professor at Harvard Kennedy School from 2001 to 2002.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter was responsible for the creation of several research centers in international political economy and national security, the joint PhD program in social policy, the Global Fellows program, and the Scholars in the Nation's Service Initiative.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter responded to these claims by pointing to the dozens of public lectures by independent academics, journalists, and other analysts that the Wilson School hosts each academic year.

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From 2002 to 2004, Anne-Marie Slaughter served as president of the American Society of International Law.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter was one of the early members on the Centre for International Governance Innovation international board of directors.

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At the State Department, Anne-Marie Slaughter was chief architect of the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review whose first iteration was released in December 2010.

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In February 2011, at the conclusion of her two-year public service leave, Anne-Marie Slaughter returned to Princeton University.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter remains a consultant for the State Department and sits on the secretary of state's Foreign Policy Advisory Board.

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Since leaving the State Department, Anne-Marie Slaughter remains a frequent commentator on foreign policy issues by publishing op-eds in major newspapers, magazines and blogs and curating foreign policy news on Twitter.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter appears regularly on CNN, BBC, NPR, and PBS and lectures to academic, civic, and corporate audiences.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter has written a regular opinion column for Project Syndicate since January 2012.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter has served on the boards of numerous non-profit organizations, including the Council of Foreign Relations, the New America Foundation, the National Endowment for Democracy, the National Security Network and the Brookings Doha Center.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter is a member of the advisory board of the Center for New American Security, the Truman Project, and the bipartisan Development Council of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2011.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter was previously on the board of the McDonald's Corporation and that of the Citigroup Economic and Political Strategies Advisory Group.

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In 2013, Anne-Marie Slaughter was named president and CEO of the New America Foundation, a think-tank based in Washington, DC dedicated to renewing America in the Digital Age.

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In July 2005, Anne-Marie Slaughter wrote in the American Journal of International Law about the responsibility to protect that:.

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One week after the adoption with many abstentions of the latter Resolution, Anne-Marie Slaughter wrote a strong endorsement of Western military intervention in Libya.

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On 25 August 2011, she was roundly criticized by Matt Welch, who sorted through many of Anne-Marie Slaughter's prior op-eds and concluded that she was a "situational constitutionalist".

31.

Anne-Marie Slaughter was singled out for criticism, for her statement that "it clearly can be in the US and the West's strategic interest to help social revolutions fighting for the values we espouse and proclaim[,]" in an article Bandow characterized as "celebratory" concerning the outcome of NATO intervention in Libya.

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In 2015, Anne-Marie Slaughter clarified that she hoped to stimulate a discussion about a wide range of working mothers, not only those in prestigious or lucrative careers.

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Anne-Marie Slaughter was named president and CEO of the think-tank New America in 2013.

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In 2017, The New York Times alleged that Anne-Marie Slaughter had closed the Open Markets research group and dismissed its director Barry Lynn because he had criticized Google, a major donor of New America, and called for it to be broken up.