Executive Director, Managing the Atom
posted Thursday February 23, 2006 under administrivia by jeffreyAs most of you know already, I am leaving the University of Maryland to become the Executive Director of the Managing the Atom Project at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
It is hard to express how excited I am by this opportunity and saddened to leave so many friends in Washington.
Here is the official announcement:
ARMS CONTROL EXPERT JEFFREY LEWIS NAMED DIRECTOR OF MANAGING THE ATOM PROJECT
Cambridge, Mass.—Dr. Jeffrey Lewis has been named as the Executive Director of the Managing the Atom Project, the principal research team focused on nuclear proliferation, nuclear arms control, and nuclear energy policy at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. Dr. Lewis will join the Belfer Center on March 9.
Lewis most recently served as a research fellow at the Center for
International and Security Studies at the University of Maryland School of Public Policy (CISSM). His research there focused on China’s nuclear weapons policies and the military uses of outer space. Dr. Lewis founded and maintains the leading blog on nuclear arms control and nonproliferation, ArmsControlWonk.com, and is a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. MIT Press will publish Dr. Lewis’ book, The Minimum Means of Reprisal: China’s Search for Security in the Nuclear Age, in July. He received his PhD in Public Policy from the University of Maryland, College Park and his BA in Philosophy and Political Science from Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois.Lewis will coordinate the efforts of the faculty, staff, and fellows who make up the Managing the Atom Project. The project brings together an international and interdisciplinary group of scholars and former government officials to conduct policy-relevant research on key strategic issues related to the future of nuclear weapons and nuclear energy. The Managing the Atom Project is a cooperative project of the Science, Technology, and Public Policy Program, the International Security Program, and the Energy and Natural Resources Program within the Belfer Center in Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. Program Directors John Holdren, Stephen Miller, and Henry Lee, respectively, serve as Co-Principal Investigators of Managing the Atom.
“Jeffrey’s outstanding analytical skills and his demonstrated enthusiasm for the work we do will make him a wonderful addition to the team,” Holdren said. “We are honored to have him as a colleague and look forward to his contributions.”
“The MTA project has conducted unparalleled work in the field of arms control and nonproliferaiton,” said Lewis. “I look forward to helping these outstanding scholars bring innovative ideas to the forefront of the policy debate.”
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On a related note, I will be moving over the weekend of March 3-7, so Victoria Samson will be holding down the fort in my absence.



— Captain_Canuck · Feb 24, 07:06 AM ·
— Rodger · Feb 24, 07:33 AM ·
— Bill Robinson · Feb 24, 07:35 AM ·
Arms Control Wonk.com will live on—with the entirely reasonable expectation of my new employers that I will comport myself appropriately for someone directing a large project at a well-known academic institution.
— Jeffrey Lewis · Feb 24, 08:03 AM ·
— John Field · Feb 24, 09:24 AM ·
Congratulations! But I’m sorry to see you leave our university. All the best, and I hope you continue blogging.
Tom
— tom hilde · Feb 24, 10:43 AM ·
— Drew · Feb 24, 03:22 PM ·
Hopefully we’ll see arms control (and “atom management” especially) take the front seat in security policy that it so badly deserves. It’s mind-boggling how we can spend so much resources on fighting insignificant foes and so little on the truly existential threats.
— Anders Widebrant · Feb 25, 01:44 AM ·
Keep up the good work!
— Cheryl Rofer · Feb 26, 05:30 AM ·
We’re all glad to hear about this exciting new opportunity for you and the continuation of the best blog on the net.
— James · Feb 27, 07:25 AM ·
— Jamie · Feb 27, 01:47 PM ·
I never thought Arms control could be as funny or easy to understand as you’ve made it.
Long live the wonk.
— stevensnell · Feb 27, 10:55 PM ·