Difference between revisions of "Louise Richardson"

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[[Image:Louise Richardson.jpg|right|thumb|Louise Richardson]]  
 
[[Image:Louise Richardson.jpg|right|thumb|Louise Richardson]]  
'''Louise Richardson''' is an academic and administrator currently based at Harvard University where she is Executive Dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Senior Lecturer in Government at the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, as well as a Lecturer at Harvard Law School. She is considered an expert on terrorism and is the author of ''What Terrorists Want: Understanding the Enemy, Containing the Threat''.
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'''Louise Richardson''' is an academic and administrator currently based at the [[terrorexpertise:University of St. Andrews|University of St. Andrews]]. She is considered an expert on terrorism and is the author of ''What Terrorists Want: Understanding the Enemy, Containing the Threat''.
  
 
==Education and Career==
 
==Education and Career==
Richardson was born in Ireland to Catholic parents. Following the Bloody Sunday massacre of 1972, in which 26 Irish protesters were shot by British troops in Derry, Richardson says she would have joined the IRA "in a heartbeat". "But," the ''Christian Science Monitor'' writes, "she was only 14, and as she attended university and learned the real story behind some of her childhood myths, she became more interested in understanding terrorism than in joining it." <ref>University of St. Andrews news release, [http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/news/Title,21842,en.html 'University names next Principal'], 3 June 2008 </ref><ref>Peter Grier, '[http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0905/p14s02-bogn.html To fight terrorism, you must know your enemy]', ''Christian Science Monitor'', 5 September 2006</ref>
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Richardson was born in Ireland to Catholic parents. Following the Bloody Sunday massacre of 1972, in which 26 Irish protesters were shot (and 14 killed) by British troops in Derry, Richardson says she would have joined the IRA "in a heartbeat". "But," the ''Christian Science Monitor'' writes, "she was only 14, and as she attended university and learned the real story behind some of her childhood myths, she became more interested in understanding terrorism than in joining it." <ref>University of St. Andrews news release, [http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/news/Title,21842,en.html 'University names next Principal'], 3 June 2008 </ref><ref>Peter Grier, '[http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0905/p14s02-bogn.html To fight terrorism, you must know your enemy]', ''Christian Science Monitor'', 5 September 2006</ref>
  
 
She received a Bachelor's degree in history from Trinity College, Dublin in 1980. She earned Master's degrees in Political Science from the University of California at Los Angeles and Harvard and in History from Trinity College, Dublin. She also has a Doctoral degree in Government from Harvard.  
 
She received a Bachelor's degree in history from Trinity College, Dublin in 1980. She earned Master's degrees in Political Science from the University of California at Los Angeles and Harvard and in History from Trinity College, Dublin. She also has a Doctoral degree in Government from Harvard.  
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==Attempted censorship==
 
==Attempted censorship==
The original publisher of Richardson's book ''What Terrorists Want'', objected to a line in Chapter Six which read: “The 3,000 casualties inflicted by al-Qaeda, while enormous, pale in comparison to the 30,000 suicides and 16,000 homicides in the US that same year, not to mention the 42,000 Americans who died in car crashes – 17,500 of them alcohol-related fatalities.” According to the ''Financial Times'', Richardson said she 'not willing to change a single substantive point' and says she was “happy to pay back the advance and walk away there and then”. <ref>Jennie Erdal, '[http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/d1b83d06-0863-11de-8a33-0000779fd2ac.html A professor’s bold thinking on terrorism]', ''Financial Times'', 6 March 2009</ref>
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The original publisher of Richardson's book ''What Terrorists Want'', objected to a line in Chapter Six which read: “The 3,000 casualties inflicted by al-Qaeda, while enormous, pale in comparison to the 30,000 suicides and 16,000 homicides in the US that same year, not to mention the 42,000 Americans who died in car crashes – 17,500 of them alcohol-related fatalities.” According to the ''Financial Times'', Richardson told the publisher she 'not willing to change a single substantive point' and says she was “happy to pay back the advance and walk away there and then”. <ref>Jennie Erdal, '[http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/d1b83d06-0863-11de-8a33-0000779fd2ac.html A professor’s bold thinking on terrorism]', ''Financial Times'', 6 March 2009</ref>
  
 
==Publications, Resources & Notes==
 
==Publications, Resources & Notes==
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<references/>
 
<references/>
  
[[Category:terrorologist|Richardson, Louise]]
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[[Category:terrorologist|Richardson, Louise]][[Category:Harvard alumni|Richardson, Louise]]

Latest revision as of 18:14, 23 April 2012

Louise Richardson

Louise Richardson is an academic and administrator currently based at the University of St. Andrews. She is considered an expert on terrorism and is the author of What Terrorists Want: Understanding the Enemy, Containing the Threat.

Education and Career

Richardson was born in Ireland to Catholic parents. Following the Bloody Sunday massacre of 1972, in which 26 Irish protesters were shot (and 14 killed) by British troops in Derry, Richardson says she would have joined the IRA "in a heartbeat". "But," the Christian Science Monitor writes, "she was only 14, and as she attended university and learned the real story behind some of her childhood myths, she became more interested in understanding terrorism than in joining it." [1][2]

She received a Bachelor's degree in history from Trinity College, Dublin in 1980. She earned Master's degrees in Political Science from the University of California at Los Angeles and Harvard and in History from Trinity College, Dublin. She also has a Doctoral degree in Government from Harvard.

From 1989 to 2001, she was Assistant Professor and then Associate Professor of Government at Harvard, specialising in international security. She served for eight years as chair of the Board of Tutors and as head tutor in the Department of Government. For several years, she taught Harvard's large undergraduate lecture course, Terrorist Movements in International Relations.[3]

In June 2008 the University of St. Andrews announced that Richardson would be appointed Principal of the University, effective in January 2009. [4]

Attempted censorship

The original publisher of Richardson's book What Terrorists Want, objected to a line in Chapter Six which read: “The 3,000 casualties inflicted by al-Qaeda, while enormous, pale in comparison to the 30,000 suicides and 16,000 homicides in the US that same year, not to mention the 42,000 Americans who died in car crashes – 17,500 of them alcohol-related fatalities.” According to the Financial Times, Richardson told the publisher she 'not willing to change a single substantive point' and says she was “happy to pay back the advance and walk away there and then”. [5]

Publications, Resources & Notes

Publications

  • Louise Richardson, What Terrorists Want: Understanding the Enemy, Containing the Threat (New York: Random House, 2006) (ISBN: 1400064813; 9781400064816)
  • Louise Richardson, The roots of terrorism (New York: Routledge, 2006) (ISBN: 0415954371 9780415954372; 041595438X; 9780415954389)
  • Louise Richardson, When allies differ : Anglo-American relations during the Suez and Falklands crises (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1996) (ISBN: 0312158521; 9780312158521)

Resources

Jennie Erdal, 'A professor’s bold thinking on terrorism', Financial Times, 6 March 2009

Notes

  1. University of St. Andrews news release, 'University names next Principal', 3 June 2008
  2. Peter Grier, 'To fight terrorism, you must know your enemy', Christian Science Monitor, 5 September 2006
  3. University of St. Andrews news release, 'University names next Principal', 3 June 2008
  4. University of St. Andrews news release, 'University names next Principal', 3 June 2008
  5. Jennie Erdal, 'A professor’s bold thinking on terrorism', Financial Times, 6 March 2009