Christopher K. Tucker

Christopher K. Tucker is a businessman and social entrepreneur active in the geospatial industry and the US national security community. He is the Chairman of the American Geographical Society. He manages Principal of Yale House Ventures, a portfolio of technology startups and social ventures that span the worlds of energy, geospatial, sensor, cyber-security, open source, and social media technologies, across the domains of defense/intelligence, international affairs, civilian government, commercial industry, NGOs, and academia.[1]. He is also the Chairman and CEO of The MapStory Foundation and President of the foreign policy advocacy group, Friends of the Arc.

Tucker served as special adviser to the executive vice provost of Columbia University. While at Columbia, Tucker co-founded the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes[2] (now at Arizona State University) and the Columbia Public Policy Consortium,[3] and co-taught courses at Columbia's School of International and Public Affairs.

Tucker stepped down as senior vice president for the Americas and national programs at ERDAS[4] in November 2008; about the same time his name was being floated in back channel conversations for a position at CIA.[5] He joined ERDAS by way of its acquisition of IONIC Enterprise,[6] where Tucker had served as president and CEO[7] since leaving In-Q-Tel.

Board Activities

Tucker serves on the board of directors of the Open Geospatial Consortium and the US Geospatial Intelligence Foundation. Tucker serves, or has served on Federal Advisory Committees such as the Defense Science Board's Intelligence Task Force and the United States Department of Interior's National Geospatial Advisory Committee. Tucker has served on the United States National Research Council Committee on NGA's GEOINT Research Priorities.[8] Tucker serves on various other corporate and non-profit boards in his Yale House Ventures capacity. In 2013, he was elected to the American Geographical Society Council.

Social Ventures

Tucker plays a prominent role in two social ventures.

Tucker is the founder of the MapStory Foundation which seeks to develop an online social media channel/platform that enables a global community of experts to "crowd source" socio-cultural data within a geospatial and temporal framework, and to publish "MapStories" as spatio-temporally enabled narratives.

Tucker is also the President and member of the Board of Directors of Friends of the Arc which advocates for the implementation of the Palestinian Arc as conceived by the RAND Corporation and Suisman Urban Design, as a path toward the resolution of the Middle East conflict. The Arc has been covered extensively in the press as a viable path toward peace.[9]

Author

Tucker writes at the intersection of technology, strategy, geography, and national security.[10]

He recently published his book "A Planet of 3 Billion" where he makes the case that the Earth’s 'carrying capacity' is limited to 3 billion humans, and that humanity’s century long binge has incurred an unsustainable ecological debt that must be paid down promptly, or else cataclysm awaits. Equal parts history, science, economics, demography, conservation thinking, ethics, and foreign affairs - all through a geographic lens - this provocative book fundamentally redefines how you will think about the fate of humanity, and the planet from which our species evolved. More information on "A Planet of 3 Billion" at planet3billion.com. Tucker has also been widely published in Foreign Policy, the Huffington Post, Federal Computer Weekly, Small Wars Journal, Space News, Directions Magazine, Science Progress, Geospatial Intelligence Forum, the Air Force Space Command's High Frontier Journal the influential foreign affairs blog The Washington Note.

In the News

Tucker has been the subject of several articles as far back as 2001. In 2001, Tucker was on the cover of Computerworld Magazine, and interviewed in an article entitled "Cloak and Dagger IT", regarding some of the discoveries and developments brought forth through funding at In-Q-Tel, the CIA's venture capital fund.[11] Tucker has been interviewed several times in various geospatial industry media. In 2008, Tucker was interviewed for the geospatial-intelligence themed blog got geoint?.[12]

Education

Tucker earned his B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. at Columbia University in the City of New York. Tucker's dissertation is titled "The Role of Government in Supporting Technological Advance".[13] Tucker's graduate advisers included Richard R. Nelson, Ira Katznelson and Michael M. Crow.

Biography

Tucker was born and raised in Winter Haven, Florida, at the time known as both the citrus capital and water skiing capital of the world as well as the winter training camp for the Boston Red Sox. His wife is Ann Tucker, president and CEO of Tucker Global, LLC.[14] His father is Dr. David P.H. Tucker, a retired professor at the University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Citrus Research and Education Center. His mother is Shirley J. Tucker, a retired public school teacher in Florida's Polk County public school system. His brother Jonathan Tucker is a senior research analyst at the National Academy of Public Administration.[15]

gollark: What>
gollark: My server also uses an unencrypted disk because it needs to be able to boot without human intervention.
gollark: My desktop's disk *used* to be encrypted, but I was lazy when reinstalling the OS a while ago so I don't *now*.
gollark: My laptop boots in 25 seconds from pressing the power button off my cheap SATA SSD, but that's counting the time-to-usable-desktop, the firmware is quite slow, and I have to enter the disk encryption key and my user password.
gollark: Yes, in raw sequential IO, but I don't think they're massively faster for random read/writes.

References

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