The New Era Foreign Policy Conference is a two-day workshop for Political Science
Ph.D. students, post-docs, and foreign policy experts held at the Institute
of International Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. This is the second annual conference; the first conference took place in March of 2006.
The goals of the conference are two-fold: first, to bring together and start
building a network of Political Science Ph.D. students who are policy-oriented,
and interested in U.S. foreign policy and international politics; and second,
to invigorate the foreign policy community with fresh ideas and new avenues
for future research.
Participants are asked to assess the medium-term challenges and opportunities
currently facing the United States, to critically examine the macro-level goals
that underpin American foreign policy, and to problematize the strategies and
policies meant to achieve these goals.
This theme of medium-term strategic thinking is based upon the mission statement
of the New Era Foreign Policy Project at the Institute of International Studies:
American foreign policy should be systematically proactive, seeking to
understand significant medium and long-term global changes, and to influence
the impact of such trends on U.S. interests and those of the rest of the world. Foreign
policy writ large, in this view, is about comprehending major contextual and
environmental changes taking place in the world and steering, directing, and
influencing the impact of those trends over a reasonable time frame.
Rather than the presentation of papers with panels and discussants, the format of the conference is a series of break-out and scenario-planning sessions. In 2007, the Political Science Ph.D. students were joined by policy experts with experience at the National Security Council, the Department of Defense, the RAND Corporation, the Brookings Institution, and the Council on Foreign Relations.
Please direct any questions regarding the conference to Ely Ratner at ely "at" berkeley.edu.