David C. King

David C. King is an American author, political consultant and senior lecturer at Harvard University. He lectures on Legislatures, Political Parties and Interest Groups. Professor King joined the Harvard faculty in 1992.[1]

Professional career

He is currently Lecturer in Public Policy at The Harvard Kennedy School and the Faculty Chair of two programs -

  • Harvard's Program for Newly Elected Members of the U.S. Congress
  • Harvard’s executive program for leaders in State and Local Governments.

Harvard Kennedy School

King is the faculty director of Harvard's program for Newly Elected Members of the U.S. Congress which introduces officials to the complex legal and ethical issues involved in holding office. He has run similar programs for the State Duma of the Russian Federation, and he has advised on legislative design issues in several countries, including South Korea, Nicaragua, Chile, and Bolivia. Along with John Della Volpe, founder of SocialSphere and Director of Polling at Harvard Kennedy School's Institute of Politics, King has overseen Harvard's surveys of young peoples' interests in community service and politics.

Publications

King is co-author along with Zachary Karabell of The Generation of Trust: How the U.S. Military has Regained the Public’s Confidence since Vietnam, (The American Enterprise Institute, 2003) [2] He is the author of Turf Wars: How Congressional Committees Claim Jurisdiction, (University of Chicago Press, 1997),[3] and co-editor with Joseph S. Nye and Philip Zelikow on Why People Don’t Trust Government, (Harvard University Press, 1997). Also published in Japanese (Tokyo: Eiji Shuppan, 2002).[4]

gollark: Or, well, that generation pass did.
gollark: It really likes microcontrollers.
gollark: and/or absorbing impacts/optical/magnet/etc/contrahumor/magnet/etc/contrahumor/magnet/magnet/<|endoftext|>That would make it hard to make it do anything but offload it to a USB.<|endoftext|>Unless you have a USB-C.<|endoftext|>No, that's a USB-C port.<|endoftext|>Citation:* microcontrollers* microcontrollers<|endoftext|>Anyway, the code is an embedded part of the microcontrollers in a microcontrollers in the M_LEM, and can be engineered for more performant, and allows you to move items into multiple locations.<|endoftext|>No.<|endoftext|>I mean, *some* cables, but not transpters.<|endoftext|>And some WiFi cables have to be transpters for some bizarre reason.<|endoftext|>You can use a USB-C port or something.<|endoftext|>The ethernet shield thing can't replicate the ethernet shield, so it's fiddly, because it's
gollark: Aha, it generated gollarious data!
gollark: Your ideatic manipulation tech is exayears behind that of GTech™; you can't seriously expect that to work.

References

  1. HKS Faculty Biography
  2. Freedman, Lawrence D. (September–October 2003). "Review of The Generation of Trust". Foreign Affairs. 82 (5): 174–175. doi:10.2307/20033707. JSTOR 20033707.
  3. Jones, Bryan D. (June 1998). "Review of Turf Wars". The American Political Science Review. 92 (2): 465–466. doi:10.2307/2585710. JSTOR 2585710.
  4. Reviews of Why People Don't Trust Government:
    • Wasserman, Gary (Spring 1998). Political Science Quarterly. 113 (1): 141–142. doi:10.2307/2657661. JSTOR 2657661.CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
    • Williams, Walter (Fall 1998). Journal of Policy Analysis and Management. 17 (4): 721–730. JSTOR 3325722.CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
    • Philpot, Robert (April 1999). Journal of American Studies. 33 (1): 179–180. JSTOR 27556620.CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
    • Granjon, Marie-Christine (April 2000). Revue française de science politique. 50 (2): 353. JSTOR 43119734.CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
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