Hall Gardner
Hall Gardner (born January 10, 1954) is a professor of International Politics at the American University of Paris. He received his BA from Colgate University and his MA and PhD from the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at the Johns Hopkins University.[1] Primarily he studies the origins of war, focusing on its sources and impacts, both local and global and the ways in which such conflicts can be resolved. As a geo-strategist, his comparative historical approach combines theory and contemporary international affairs in dealing with topics such as NATO and the European Union, post-Soviet Union Russia and its effects on China and Eurasia, and the international consequences of the “war on terrorism.”[2]
Career
Teaching
In 1988, Gardner began teaching at the Johns Hopkins SAIS-Nanjing Center as well as writing for the Los Angeles Times in 1989 on China’s democracy movement and the potential for U.S. diplomatic recognition of Vietnam. From 1989-1990, he continued his teaching at Johns Hopkins SAIS in Washington, D.C.. Then while teaching at the American University of Paris in the 1990s, his articles, books, and editorials focused on the topic of NATO enlargement. In Fall 2008, he became a member of the Russia, Europe and the United States Policy Study Group in conjunction with the EastWest Institute located in Brussels, which concentrated on the Georgia-Russia conflict.
Writing
Gardner is an internationally published author of books and numerous articles on international politics. As a member of the Conseil Scientifique, he is published in Géostratégiques, as well as in Politique Américaine in Spring 2008, the Harvard International Review in Winter 2003, and European Affairs in Summer, 2002. He also authors essays and book reviews in the journal, The European Legacy. Moreover, Gardner has made several appearances as a commentator on various international news media, especially FRANCE 24.
In July 2008, Narcissus Press (Rhinebeck, NY) published The Wake-Up Blast, Gardner’s first book of original poems. Barbecue Meltdown, his second book of poetry published by Narcissus Press, is set to appear in 2009. He is working on several other poetry books and novels, including Dolphin Legends and the Man of War, a long prose poem, and Tie Dyed in Blood, a novel inspired by his time spent in China and Vietnam from 1988-1989.[2]
Books
Averting Global War: Regional Challenges, Overextension, and Options for American Strategy (New York: Palgrave, 2007)
American Global Strategy and the "War on Terrorism" (Ashgate, 2005)
NATO and the European Union: New World New Europe New Threats (Ashgate, 2004), Editor and Contributor: Preface; Introduction; Chapter 2: “From Balance to Imbalance of Terror,” Chapter 8: “Toward New Euro-Atlantic, Euro-Mediterranean Security Communities”; Chapter 16: “Preclusive War with Iraq: Regional and Global Ramifications”
The New Transatlantic Agenda: Facing the Challenges of Global Governance (Ashgate, 2001), Hall Gardner and Radoslava Stefanova, eds. Contributor: Chapter 9, “Russia and China: The Risks of Uncoordinated Transatlantic Strategies” and “Conclusion”
Central and Southeastern Europe in Transition: Perspectives on Success and Failure Since 1989 (Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, March 1999). General editor and contributor, “Chapter 10: The Genesis of NATO Enlargement and of War ‘over’ Kosovo”
Dangerous Crossroads: Europe, Russia, and the Future of NATO (Westport, CT: Praeger, 1997)
Surviving the Millennium: American Global Strategy, the Collapse of the Soviet Empire and the Question of Peace (Westport, CT and London: Praeger, 1994.)
NATO’s New Strategy and ESDI: European Security in the New Millennium (Maastricht, Cicero Foundation Press, 1999), eds., Marcel van Herpen; Hall Gardner. Contributor: “Toward Separate – but not Separable- European and Euro-Atlantic Commands”
The Wake Up Blast (New York: Narcissus Press, 2008)
Conferences and seminars
World Political Forum, invited by Mikhail Gorbachev, speaker, 2003, 2006, 2008
Commission des affaires étrangères, Assemblée Nationale, France, invited by former French Prime Minister Edouard Balladur, speaker, February 2007, spoke on “US policy toward Iraq and Iran”
Second Annual Presidential Conference of the American University of Paris, UNESCO, organizer and speaker, May 26, 2004, spoke on “From the Egyptian Crisis of 1882 to Iraq of 2003: Alliance Ramification of the British and American Bids for World Hegemony”
NATO and the European Union: New World, New Europe, New Threats, French Senate, organizer and speaker, December 1991
References
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