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Andrew Newman

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Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
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Andrew Newman

Research Associate, Project on Managing the Atom

Contact:
Telephone: 617-496-4680
Fax: 617-496-0606
Email: andrew_newman@ksg.harvard.edu

 

Experience

Andrew Newman is a Research Associate with the Project on Managing the Atom. His research interests include nuclear proliferation, nuclear terrorism, and the future of the nuclear fuel cycle.

Before coming to the Kennedy School in August 2008, he was Assistant Counselor for Nuclear Science and Technology at the Australian Embassy in Washington, D.C. Previously, Andrew worked with the Office of the Emergency Services Commissioner, Victorian Department of Justice, Australia, where he co-wrote a report on Victoria’s capacity to respond to a major, September 11–type emergency. In 2001, he worked with the Russian American Nuclear Security Advisory Council (now the Partnership for Global Security) in Washington, D.C.

He has taught at Monash University and the University of Melbourne in Australia and in 2004 was a short-term visiting scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars’ Kennan Institute in Washington, D.C.

He co-edited Japan, Australia and Asia-Pacific Security (Routledge, 2006) and has published in The Nonproliferation Review, Contemporary Security Policy, The Journal of Strategic Studies, Global Change, Peace and Security, and The Australian Journal of International Affairs.

Andrew holds a Ph.D. from Monash University. His thesis evaluated the role of Congress in the formulation and implementation of U.S. programs designed to prevent ‘leakage’ of nuclear weapons, materials, and expertise from the former Soviet Union.

 

 

By Date

2008

November 18, 2008

Preventing Nuclear Terrorism: An Agenda for the Next President

Report

By Matthew Bunn, Associate Professor of Public Policy; Co-Principal Investigator, Project on Managing the Atom and Andrew Newman, Research Associate, Project on Managing the Atom

Matthew Bunn and Andrew Newman outline specific steps that President-elect Obama should take to reduce the threat of nuclear terrorism to a fraction of its current level during his first term in office. This paper summarizes the recommendations in Securing the Bomb 2008 and provides additional detail on organizing the U.S. government to prevent nuclear terrorism and on steps that should be taken during the transition and the opening weeks of the new administration.

 

 

AP Photo

October 7, 2008

"A Working Relationship"

Op-Ed, Baltimore Sun

By Matthew Bunn, Associate Professor of Public Policy; Co-Principal Investigator, Project on Managing the Atom and Andrew Newman, Research Associate, Project on Managing the Atom

"Today, the United States and Europe must respond to Russia's military behavior in Georgia and elsewhere in its former empire. But they must also maintain a working relationship with Russia to continue vital cooperation between Russian and U.S. experts to reduce nuclear weapons and keep them out of terrorists' hands....Preventing nuclear terrorism must be a top priority of U.S. national security policy, and securing global stockpiles of nuclear weapons and materials is the most effective way to achieve this."

 

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