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- Name
- Title
- Warburg Professor in International Relations
- Phone
- 617-521-2572
- Office
- 300 The Fenway - 300 The Fenway - Main Campus Building -E203C Boston, MA 02115 USA , MA
- catharin.dalpino@simmons.edu
Catharin Dalpino is the Joan M. Warburg Professor of International Relations. Her career in foreign affairs includes positions in government, international organizations, think tanks and non-governmental organizations. She is a specialist both in US-Asian relations and in democracy promotion.
Professor Dalpino has served as the State Department's first Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, in the Clinton administration. Before that she worked at the United Nations in Geneva; at the World Bank; and, for ten years, with The Asia Foundation. She was The Asia Foundation's resident representative for Thailand and re-opened the Foundation's programs in Laos and Cambodia.
After leaving the State Department, Professor Dalpino was a Fellow at the Brookings Institution, where she covered US policy in Asia. She has also been a Resident Associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; a Nonresident Senior Fellow at The Atlantic Council; a Visiting Scholar in Southeast Asian Studies at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies; and a Fellow at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy at Georgetown University.
Prior to coming to Simmons, she was Visiting Associate Professor in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and Director of Georgetown's Thai Studies Program for five years. She was also an adjunct professor at Johns Hopkins/SAIS and with the Elliot School of International Affairs at George Washington University.
Professor Dalpino has also worked as an advocate for improving relations with the countries of the former Indochina (Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia). She was the Washington Representative for the Fund for Reconciliation and Development, and Director of the Aspen Institute's Project on Agent Orange/Dioxin in Vietnam.
Professor Dalpino is the author of two books, Anchoring Third Wave Democracies (Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, 1998) and Deferring Democracy: Encouraging Openness in Authoritarian Regimes (Brookings Institution Press, 2000). At the present time, she is at work on two books, one of the US-Thailand alliance and one on US policy toward Southeast Asia after September 11. She is also conducting research on how the Vietnam War is taught to generations of Americans born after 1975.