美国欧亚基金会主席Charles Maynes 访问华东师范大学
2004年1月12日,美国前助理国务卿、现美国欧亚基金会主席Charles William Maynes 受中心主任冯绍雷教授邀请访问华东师范大学并与法政学院、俄罗斯研究中心的教师及研究生进行学术交流。 附个人简历
Charles William Maynes
President, Eurasia Foundation
Biography
Charles William Maynes has held senior positions in the Department of State, U.S. Congress, publishing world, and the foundation community. He is currently president of the Eurasia Foundation, which promotes economic and political reform in the formerSoviet Union. The Foundation has made more than 5000 grants over the past eight years at a total value of more than $100 million to fund individuals and institutions at the grass roots pressing for democratic and economic change.
For 17 years, Mr. Maynes served as editor of Foreign Policy, regarded as one of the world’s pre-eminent journals of international affairs. During his editorship, the journal won five awards for editorial excellence. Mr. Maynes himself wrote frequently for his own journal and for newspapers and magazines around the world, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the International Herald Tribune, Foreign Affairs, The Nation, and the Washington Monthly among others. He appeared frequently over television and radio. In 1988 he served as one of the commentators on the McNeil-Lehrer Program for the Presidential Debates. A 2000 survey by the Library of Congress of the most important articles published in recent years onAmerica’s national interest cited three articles by Maynes, the only author cited that often.
As Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs from 1977-80, Mr. Maynes supervised allU.S.policy toward the United Nations and its Specialized Agencies. During his tenure, he managedU.S.participation in the Namibian Contact Group at the United Nations, which succeeded in drafting the framework agreement that subsequently led to the independence ofNamibia. He managed the development of the peacekeeping mandate for the United Nations in southernLebanon. He was the last assistant secretary of state for international organization affairs that persuaded the Congress to give full funding for the United Nations.
Maynes served as the Secretary of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace from 1972 to 1977. In that position, he wrote widely on international issues and developed the Senior Fellows Program of the Endowment, which lasts to this day. He was the senior advisor to the Endowment’s president and board throughout this period.
In Congress, Maynes worked for both Democratic and Republican Members while serving as a Congressional Fellow of the American Political Science Association. He became the Senior Legislative Assistant to Senator Fred R. Harris (D. -Okla.). He was staff director of the Ad Hoc Committee on Senate Reform. He authored policy papers for the Members of Congress for Peace through Law while serving on the staff of F. Bradford Morse (R-Mass).
In 1972 he joined the campaign of Sargent Shriver, then the Democratic Candidate for Vice President, as head of his issues staff. In 1976 he served as a member of the Carter-Mondale Transition Team for the State Department. In 1992 he served as a member of the Clinton-Gore Transition Team for the Treasury Department.
Mr. Maynes was a Foreign Service Officer for nine years, serving in the Bureau of International Organizations inWashingtonand the USAID mission inLaos. He received a Departmental Award for his work on the funding crisis in the United Nations. He rose to be the chief non-project economist for the USAID mission inLaosduring his tenure there.
Mr. Maynes is a Magna cum Laude graduate ofHarvardCollege, being one of eight students of his class elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his junior year. He received a Rhodes Scholarship to attendMertonCollegeatOxfordUniversityand graduated with First Class Honors in Politics, Philosophy and Economics.
Mr. Maynes is a member of the National Academy of Public Administration, the Council on Foreign Relations, the International Institute for Strategic Studies, the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs, and the United Nations Association.