Bruce Jentleson

Bruce W. Jentleson (born 1951) is a professor of public policy and political science at Duke University,[1] where he served from 2000 to 2005 as Director of the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy.

Bruce Jentleson
Jentleson speaks at the Library of Congress in 2019
Born
Bruce W. Jentleson

(1951-06-26) June 26, 1951
NationalityAmerican
Academic background
Alma mater
ThesisPipeline Politics (1983)
Doctoral advisorPeter J. Katzenstein
Academic work
DisciplinePolitical science
Sub-discipline
Institutions

Jentleson is a co-founder of the Bridging the Gap project, promoting greater policy relevance among academics.[2] From 2009 to 2011 he was Senior Advisor to the US State Department Policy Planning Director. In 2012 Jentleson served on the Obama 2012 campaign National Security Advisory Steering Committee. He also served as a senior foreign policy advisor to Vice President Al Gore in his 2000 presidential campaign, in the Clinton administration State Department (1993–94), and as a foreign policy aide to Senators Gore (1987–88) and Dave Durenberger (1978–79). He also has served on a number of policy commissions, most recently the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) Working Group co-chaired by Madeleine Albright (2011–13).[3] Prior to coming to Duke, Jentleson was a professor at UC-Davis.

Early life and education

Born June 26, 1951, Jentleson holds a PhD from Cornell University, a master's degree from the London School of Economics, and a bachelor's degree from Cornell.[3]

Books

In addition to numerous articles, Jentleson is the co-author of The End of Arrogance: America in the Global Competition of Ideas.[4]

The fifth edition of his book, American Foreign Policy: The Dynamics of Choice in the 21st Century, was released in 2013.[5]

With Friends Like These. Reagan, Bush, and Saddam. 1982–1990. (1994)

gollark: You may have won the game, but you lost the Game.
gollark: Remember when I said to fear my inferential powers, LyricLy, and you IGNORED it, like you IGNORE Macron-related Macron data?
gollark: These are very phasic, I must say. Glad I used apionic induction to use this information!
gollark: The CSS is obviously the kind I write (trivially), it inconsistently uses fairly advanced new JS like template strings and destructuring and Uint8Arrays, it uses overly general operations like zip and cartesian product and map and insertDiagonalFrom, it also uses the exotic labelling feature, I doubt many people here know about WebWorkers or the ridiculous hack I came up with a while ago to do them without an actual external file, it does IO in such an ugly accursed way, and the AI is insane.
gollark: But it would have been funny, at least.

References

  1. "Bruce W. Jentleson". Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  2. "School of International Service | American University in Washington D.C". American.edu. Retrieved September 25, 2015.
  3. "People - Sanford School of Public Policy". Fds.duke.edu. Retrieved September 25, 2015.
  4. "The End of Arrogance — Steven Weber, Bruce W. Jentleson | Harvard University Press". Hup.harvard.edu. Retrieved September 25, 2015.
  5. "American Foreign Policy | W. W. Norton & Company". Books.wwnorton.com. Retrieved September 25, 2015.
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