Difference between revisions of "Consortium for the Study of Intelligence"
Tom Griffin (talk | contribs) (founder members) |
Tom Griffin (talk | contribs) (references) |
||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
*[[Frank Trager]], New York University | *[[Frank Trager]], New York University | ||
*[[Allen Weinstein]], Smith College | *[[Allen Weinstein]], Smith College | ||
− | *[[James Q. Wilson]], Harvard University | + | *[[James Q. Wilson]], Harvard University <ref>[http://www.intelligenceconsortium.org/purpose2.htm Consortium for the Study of Intelligence - Founding members]</ref> |
+ | |||
+ | ==Notes== | ||
+ | <references/> |
Revision as of 22:37, 16 December 2007
The Consortium for the Study of Intelligence was founded in 1979 as a project of the National Strategy Information Center.
Founding Members, 1979
- Richard Betts, Columbia University
- Richard Bissell, Foreign Policy Research Institute
- Adda Bozeman, Sarah Lawrence College
- Ray Cline, Georgetown University
- Stephen Gibert, Georgetown University
- Roy Godson, Georgetown University
- Samuel Huntington, Harvard University
- John Norton Moore, University of Virginia
- Myres McDougal, Yale University
- Robert Nisbet, American Enterprise Institute
- Robert Pfaltzgraff, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
- Richard Pipes, Harvard University
- Antonin Scalia, University of Chicago
- Paul Seabury, University of California, Berkeley
- Richard Starr, Hoover Institution
- Frank Trager, New York University
- Allen Weinstein, Smith College
- James Q. Wilson, Harvard University [1]