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Mind Games |
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Moderator: James Der Derian, Watson Institute |
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James Der Derian is a Watson Institute research
professor of international relations and professor of political science at
the University of Massachusetts
at Amherst. He is the principal investigator of InfoTechWarPeace. Der
Derian's most recent book is Virtuous War: Mapping the
Military-Industrial-Media-Entertainment Network (2001). His articles have
appeared in the New York Times, Washington Quarterly, Nation, and Wired.
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Moderator: Henrik Ø. Breitenbauch, Watson Institute |
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Henrik Ø. Breitenbauch is a Watson Institute visiting fellow and a graduate
student in international relations at the Department of Political Science,
University of Copenhagen. He is currently writing a Ph.D. dissertation on
the French academic discipline of international relations, focusing on a
historical sociology of societal and academic writing practices in a
comparative perspective. He is also a coeditor of the Danish political
magazine Rœson. |
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Benjamin B. Fischer, CIA Center for the Study of Intelligence |
 

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Benjamin B. Fischer has worked for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) for nearly 30 years, and has been headquartered at its Center for the
Study of Intelligence in recent years. The White House Millennium Council
selected his monograph At Cold War's End: US Intelligence on the Soviet
Union and Eastern Europe, 1989�1991 (1999) for inclusion in a time capsule
at the National Archives to be opened in 2100. In 2002 Fischer was a
visiting research fellow at the Norwegian Nobel Institute (Oslo). |
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William Duggan, writer |
 

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William Duggan is the author of The Great Thirst and Lovers of the African Night. He has a PhD from Columbia University and teaches strategy there. He is the co-founder of the Creative Strategy Group, which helps organizations and individuals apply Napoleon's glance to whatever they do. |
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Helen Nissenbaum, NYU |
 

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Helen Nissenbaum is an associate professor in the Culture and Communication
Department, and a senior fellow in the Information Law Institute at New York
University. She specializes in the social, ethical, and political dimensions
of information technology, and writes extensively on privacy, property
rights, electronic publication, accountability, the use of computers in
education, and values embodied in computer systems. Her publications include
Emotion and Focus (1985) and Computers, Ethics and Social Values (1995, with
D. Johnson). |
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