David A. Hamburg, Cochair
President Emeritus
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Cyrus R. Vance, Cochair
Partner
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
Gro Harlem Brundtland
Former Prime Minister of Norway
Virendra Dayal
Former Under-Secretary-General and
Chef de Cabinet to the Secretary-General
United Nations
Gareth Evans
Deputy Leader of the Opposition and Shadow Treasurer
Australia
Alexander L. George
Graham H. Stuart Professor Emeritus of International Relations
Stanford University
Flora MacDonald
Former Foreign Minister of Canada
Donald F. McHenry
Distinguished Professor in the Practice of Diplomacy
School of Foreign Service
Georgetown University
Olara A. Otunnu
President
International Peace Academy
David Owen
Chairman
Humanitas
Shridath Ramphal
Cochairman
Commission on Global Governance
Roald Z. Sagdeev
Distinguished Professor
Department of Physics
University of Maryland
John D. Steinbruner
Senior Fellow
Foreign Policy Studies Program
The Brookings Institution
Brian Urquhart
Former Under-Secretary-General for Special Political Affairs
United Nations
John C. Whitehead
Chairman
AEA Investors Inc.
Sahabzada Yaqub-Khan
Former Foreign Minister of Pakistan
Chairman, Board of Trustees
Aga Khan International University-Karachi
Herbert S. Okun
Visiting Lecturer on International Law
Yale Law School
Former U.S. Representative to the German Democratic Republic and to the UN
Jane E. Holl, Executive Director
MEMBERS OF THE ADVISORY COUNCIL
Morton Abramowitz
Former President
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Ali Abdullah Alatas
Minister for Foreign Affairs
Republic of Indonesia
Graham T. Allison
Director
Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
Harvard University
Robert Badinter
Senator of Hauts de Seine, Senat
Carol Bellamy
Executive Director
UNICEF
Harold Brown
Counselor
Center for Strategic and International Studies
McGeorge Bundy*
Scholar-in-Residence
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Jimmy Carter
Chairman
The Carter Center
Lori Damrosch
Professor of Law
Columbia University School of Law
Francis M. Deng
Senior Fellow
Foreign Policy Studies Program
The Brookings Institution
Sidney D. Drell
Professor and Deputy Director
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
Stanford University
Lawrence S. Eagleburger
Senior Foreign Policy Advisor
Baker Donelson Bearman and Caldwell
Leslie H. Gelb
President
Council on Foreign Relations
David Gompert
Vice President
National Security Research
RAND
Andrew J. Goodpaster
Chairman
The Atlantic Council of the United States
Mikhail S. Gorbachev
The Gorbachev Foundation
James P. Grant**
Executive Director
UNICEF
Lee H. Hamilton
United States House of Representatives
Theodore M. Hesburgh
President Emeritus
University of Notre Dame
Donald L. Horowitz
James B. Duke Professor of Law and Political Science
Duke University School of Law
Michael Howard
President
International Institute for Strategic Studies
Karl Kaiser
Director
Research Institute of the German Society for Foreign Affairs
Nancy Landon Kassebaum Baker
United States Senate (Ret.)
Sol M. Linowitz
Honorary Chairman
The Academy for Educational Development
Richard G. Lugar
United States Senate
Michael Mandelbaum
Christian A. Herter Professor of American Foreign Policy
The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies
The Johns Hopkins University
Robert S. McNamara
Former U.S. Secretary of Defense
William H. McNeill
Professor Emeritus of History
University of Chicago
Sam Nunn
Partner
King & Spalding
Olusegun Obasanjo
Former Head of State of Nigeria
President
Africa Leadership Forum
Sadako Ogata
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
Javier Pérez de Cuéllar
Former Secretary-General
United Nations
Condoleezza Rice
Provost
Stanford University
Elliot L. Richardson
Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy
Harold H. Saunders
Director of International Affairs
Kettering Foundation
George P. Shultz
Distinguished Fellow
Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace
Stanford University
Richard Solomon
President
United States Institute of Peace
James Gustave Speth
Administrator
United Nations Development Program
Desmond Tutu
Archbishop Emeritus of Cape Town
Admiral James D. Watkins, USN (Ret.)
Secretary of Energy, 1989*-1993
Elie Wiesel
Nobel Laureate
Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities
Boston University
I. William Zartman
Jacob Blaustein Professor of International
Organizations and Conflict Resolution
Director of African Studies and Conflict Management Programs
The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies
The Johns Hopkins University
Graham Allison is the Douglas Dillon Professor of Government at Harvard University and director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. From August 1993 until March 1994 Dr. Allison served as assistant secretary of defense for policy and plans and coordinated DOD strategy and policy toward Russia, Ukraine, and the other states of the former Soviet Union. Dr. Allison served as dean of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government from 1977 to 1989. He has been an active advisor and consultant to agencies of government, beginning with the Department of Defense in the 1960s. He was special advisor to the secretary of defense from 1985 to 1987 and has been a member of the secretary of defense's Defense Policy Board for Secretaries Weinberger, Carlucci, Cheney, and Perry. He is the author or coauthor of many books and journal articles, including Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis, Avoiding Nuclear Anarchy, and Towards a New Democratic Commonwealth. Dr. Allison was a founding member of the Trilateral Commission, a director of the Council on Foreign Relations, and has been a member of public committees and commissions, most recently the Commission on America's National Interests. Dr. Allison was educated at Davidson College; Harvard College (B.A. in history); Oxford University (B.A. and M.A., first class honors in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics); and Harvard University (Ph.D. in political science).
Hisashi Owada is the permanent representative of Japan to the United Nations. Prior to his appointment to the present post, he held the post of vice-minister for foreign affairs of Japan. Ambassador Owada joined the foreign service of Japan in 1955. From 1971 to 1984 he held various posts in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, served in the Fukuda government (1976-78), and served in the Japanese embassies in Washington and Moscow. In 1987 he was promoted to deputy vice-minister of the ministry. In 1988 he was appointed ambassador of Japan to the OECD in Paris as its permanent representative, and returned to Tokyo in 1989 to take the post of deputy minister in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. From 1991 to 1993 he held the post of vice-minister for foreign affairs of Japan. After stepping down from this post, Ambassador Owada was nominated as advisor to the minister for foreign affairs, a position he held until his present assignment. In addition to professional duties in the field of foreign affairs, Ambassador Owada has been engaged in academic activities, teaching at Tokyo University (international law and international organization) since 1963. Since 1994 he has been adjunct professor of international law at Columbia University and Inge Rennert Distinguished Visiting Professor at New York University. Ambassador Owada is on the Governing Board of the Aspen Institute, the Salzburg Seminar, the Ditchley Foundation, and the Institute for East West Studies. Ambassador Owada was educated at Tokyo University and Cambridge University.
* Deceased September 1996.
** Deceased February 1995.
To order a free report or to be added to the Commission's mailing list, please mail or fax this form to: Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict, 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Suite 715, Washington, DC 20036-2103; Phone: (202) 332-7900; Fax: (202) 332-1919. You may also order by e-mail: pdc@carnegie.org
__ David A. Hamburg, Preventing Contemporary Intergroup Violence, April
1994.
__ David A. Hamburg, Education for Conflict Resolution, April 1995.
__ Comprehensive Disclosure of Fissionable Materials: A Suggested Initiative,
June 1995.
__ Larry Diamond, Promoting Democracy in the 1990s: Actors and Instruments,
Issues and Imperatives, December 1995.
__ Andrew J. Goodpaster, When Diplomacy Is Not Enough: Managing Multinational
Military Interventions, July 1996.
__ John Stremlau, Sharpening International Sanctions: Toward a Stronger Role
for the United Nations, November 1996.
__ Alexander L. George and Jane E. Holl, The Warning-Response Problem and
Missed Opportunities in Preventive Diplomacy, May 1997.
__ John Stremlau with Helen Zille, A House No Longer Divided: Progress and
Prospects for Democratic Peace in South Africa, July 1997.
__ Nik Gowing, Media Coverage: Help or Hindrance in Conflict Prevention,
September 1997.
__ Cyrus R. Vance and David A. Hamburg, Pathfinders for Peace: A Report to
the UN Secretary-General on the Role of Special Representatives and Personal
Envoys, September 1997.
__ Preventing Deadly Conflict: Executive Summary of the Final Report,
December 1997.
__ Gail W. Lapidus with Svetlana Tsalik, eds., Preventing Deadly Conflict:
Strategies and Institutions, Proceedings of a Conference in Moscow, Russian
Federation, April 1998.
__ Douglas E. Lute, Improving National Capacity to Respond to Complex Emergencies:
The U.S. Experience, April 1998.
__ Scott R. Feil, Preventing Genocide: How the Early Use of Force Might Have
Succeeded in Rwanda, April 1998.
__ John Stremlau, People in Peril: Human Rights, Humanitarian Action, and
Preventing Deadly Conflict, May 1998.
__ John Stremlau and Francisco R. Sagasti, Preventing Deadly Conflict: Does
the World Bank Have a Role? July 1998.
__ Tom Gjelten, Professionalism in War Reporting: A Correspondent's View.
Report to the Commission, July 1998.
__ Edward J. Laurance, Light Weapons and Intrastate Conflict: Early Warning
Factors and Preventive Action, August 1998.
__ Donald Kennedy, Environmental Quality and Regional Conflict, December
1998.
__ George A. Joulwan and Christopher C. Shoemaker, Civilian-Military Cooperation
in the Prevention of Deadly Conflict: Implementing Agreements in Bosnia and
Beyond, December 1998.
__ Essays on Leadership (by Boutros Boutros-Ghali, George Bush, Jimmy
Carter, Mikhail Gorbachev, and Desmond Tutu), December 1998.
__ M. James Wilkinson, Moving Beyond Conflict Prevention to Reconciliation:
Tackling Greek-Turkish Hostility, June 1999.
__ Graham Allison and Hisashi Owada, The Responsibilities of Democracies
in Preventing Deadly Conflict: Reflections and Recommendations. July 1999.
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To order Timothy Sisk, Power Sharing and International Mediation in Ethnic
Conflicts (copublished with the United States Institute of Peace), contact
USIP at 1-800-868-8064 or 1-703-601-1590 for ordering information. To order
Bridging the Gap: A Future Security Architecture for the Middle East; The
Price of Peace: Incentives and International Conflict Prevention; Sustainable
Peace: The Role of the UN and Regional Organizations in Preventing Conflict;
Turkey's Kurdish Question; The Costs of Conflict: Prevention and Cure in the
Global Arena; and Light Weapons and Civil Conflict: Controlling the Tools of
Violence, books in the Commission series published by Rowman & Littlefield,
please contact the publisher at 1-800-462-6420 or 1-301-459-3366.