Karri Brady

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Karri Brady

Philanthropist

Karri Brady began her fundraising career in New York City at Citymeals-on-Wheels and Lighthouse International. With a background as director of the Columbia College Fund, director of development for the Yale Alumni Fund and the Shakespeare Theatre company, Karri is currently director of fundraising at the Smithsonian American Women’s History Initiative, which aims to amplify women’s voices to honor the past, inform the present, and inspire the future.

Karri Brady spoke at The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards, 2019, giving an update on the future of the Smithsonian’s Women’s Museum in Washington D.C.

Twitter: @karricatur


Cory Booker

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Cory Booker

Junior Senator for New Jersey

Cory Booker is the current junior Senator from New Jersey, elected into office in 2013. Booker is running in the Democratic primary nomination for the 2020 election. The first African-American U.S. Senator from New Jersey, he was previously the 36th Mayor of Newark from 2006 to 2013. Considered a social liberal, Booker supports women's rights, affirmative action, same-sex marriage and single-payer healthcare. During his five years in office, Booker co-sponsored and voted for the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (2013), tougher sanctions against Iran, sponsored the Bipartisan Budget Act (2013), voted for the National Defense Authorization Act (2014), co-sponsored the Respect for Marriage Act (2014) and led the successful push to pass the First Step Act (2018).

Booker lives his politics, often in unconventional and creative ways. In the summer of 1999, he went on a 10-day hunger strike in one of the most drug-infested housing complexes in Newark, an effort that resulted in increased police presence and improved security for residents. For five months in 2000, Booker took to the streets; he lived in a motor home and parked it on the worst drug corners in the city, inspiring residents and businesses to fight against drug dealing and crime. For this, TIME magazine called him “The Savior of Newark,” and he proved to the city and the nation that he is dedicated to fighting inner-city problems.

Twitter: @CoryBooker


Scott Birnbaum

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Scott Birnbaum

Project Finance attorney and leader of the Young Leadership Committee of Seeds of Peace

Scott is a member of the Board of Seeds of Peace, a founding member of the Board of the Young Leadership Committee (YLC), and he served as Chairman of the YLC Board from 2010-2012.

Scott began almost a decade of volunteering for Seeds of Peace via the Washington, D.C., chapter of the Young Leadership Committee. In 2010, he served as the chair of the Peace Market changing the model of the event to improve fundraising impact and profitability by attracting over 1,000 guests by creating a more inclusive and casual format for the event and by engaging a group of over 100 volunteers to produce the event. Scott led multiple YLC initiatives including the formation of the YLC Board and restructuring the annual Stand Up for Peace comedy event. In 2010, he was elected chairman of the YLC Board and during his almost three years of tenure, personally raised over $200,000 for the organization and lead the YLC to raise over $1 million for Seeds of Peace.

Scott combines 10 years of entrepreneurial experience including his time as co-founder of Epok, an early cloud-based Enterprise solution with his experience as a corporate attorney at White & Case and digital media expertise developed at CBS Local where he focused on Strategy, Business Development, and launching new product lines. He’s the founder and Managing Partner of Red Sea Ventures, an early stage venture fund focused on Technology and Media.

Scott is the recipient of the Young Peace Maker award for his outstanding leadership in and dedication to supporting the mission of Seeds of Peace and the YLC. 

Twitter: @Scottdbirnbaum


Paul Begala

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Paul Begala

American political consultant, political commentator

Paul Edward Begala is an American political consultant and political commentator. He was an adviser to President Bill Clinton and a chief strategist for the 1992 Clinton-Gore campaign, which carried 33 states and made Clinton the first Democrat to win the White House in twelve years. As counselor to the President in the Clinton White House, he coordinated policy, politics, and communications.

Aside from the 1992 presidential election, Begala and his business partner James Carville have had other well-known political victories including the 1991 Pennsylvania U.S. Senate victory of Harris Wofford, the 1988 re-election campaign of incumbent New Jersey U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg, and the gubernatorial victories of Robert Casey in Pennsylvania in 1986, Wallace G. Wilkinson in Kentucky in 1987, and Zell Miller in Georgia in 1990.

Begala’s most recent novel You’re Fired: The Perfect Guide to Beating Donald Trump tells us how Trump uses division to distract from the actual reality of his record. Distraction, he argues, is Trump’s superpower. And this book is Kryptonite.  In it, the man who helped elect Bill Clinton and reelect Barack Obama, details the successes and failures—and the crucial tools Democrats need to beat Trump.

Click here for more.

As an author and co-author, Begala has written five political books: Is Our Children Learning?: The Case Against George W. Bush; Buck Up, Suck Up and Come Back When You Foul Up (with James Carville); It’s Still the Economy Stupid; and Third Term: Why George W. Bush (Hearts) John McCain. Until June 2005, Begala was a co-host of CNN’s political debate program Crossfire. He is currently a Research Professor of Public Policy at Georgetown University Public Policy Institute and is teaching at the University of Georgia School of Law as a Sanders Political Leadership Scholar.

Begala’s knowledge and signature wit makes him an ideal panelist to recap the ups and downs of the Final Presidential Debate. Join The Common Good Friday, October 23rd, 12:00pm EST as Begala along with our other expert panelists answers your questions on what will come about after the final debate.

Begala was hosted by The Common Good in 2008 for a Meet & Greet.

Twitter: @PaulBegala


Dan Balz

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Dan Balz

Chief Correspondent at The Washington Post

Dan Balz is Chief Correspondent at The Washington Post. He has served as the paper’s National Editor, Political Editor, White House correspondent and Southwest correspondent. He is the co-author of two books, including the New York Times bestseller The Battle For America 2008, a narrative history of the 2008 presidential campaign.

He is the recipient of the American Political Science Association award for political coverage and shared the Gerald R. Ford award for coverage of the presidency. In 2011, he received the White House Correspondents’ Association’s Merriman Smith award for deadline writing about the presidency and the National Press Club’s award for political analysis. He is a regular panelist on PBS’s Washington Week and MSNBC’s Daily Rundown and is a frequent guest on other public affairs programs.

Twitter: @danbalz


Doug Bailey

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Doug Bailey ✝

American political consultant, Founder of The Hotline

Doug Bailey was an American political consultant and founder of The Hotline, a bipartisan, daily online briefing on American politics.

From 1968 to 1987, Bailey was President of Bailey Deardourff & Associates one of the first national political consulting firms. He worked for Republican candidates including President Gerald Ford; Senators Edward Brooke, Kit Bond, John Danforth, Charles Percy, Richard Schweiker, John Chafee, Richard Lugar, Robert Stafford, and Howard Baker; Governors Thomas Kean, William Milliken, Jim Rhodes, Otis R. Bowen, James R. Thompson, Lamar Alexander, Kit Bond, Richard Snelling, William T. Cahill, Richard Thornburgh, Jim Rhodes, Robert Ray, Al Quie, and Pete DuPont.

After leaving day-to-day operations at The Hotline, which he began in 1987, Bailey became involved in numerous philanthropic activities. Most recently, he was one of the four co-founders of the political reform movement Unity08, a company that hoped to start a new centrist party for the 2008 presidential election. He appeared on The Colbert Report to promote his cause. He also founded Freedom’s Answer, a non-partisan voter turnout effort, with former Clinton Press Secretary Mike McCurry. He also served on the Board of Directors of the Fletcher School at Tufts University.

Bailey passed away on June 10, 2013, at the age of 79.

He spoke in a discussion on The Politics of Polarization alongside Gerald Rafshoon at The Common Good in 2007.


Sheikh Mohammed Bin Essa Al Khalifa of Bahrain

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Sheikh Mohammed Bin Essa Al Khalifa of Bahrain

Chief Executive of the Bahrain Economic Development Board

Sheikh Mohammed bin Essa Al Khalifa was appointed the role as Chief Executive of the Bahrain Economic Development Board in June 2005, after ten years of serving as a close and trusted aide to His Royal Highness Prince Salman Bin Hamad Al Khalifa, Crown Prince of Bahrain, and as President of His Royal Highness’ Court. As Chief Executive of the Bahrain Economic Development Board, Sheik Mohammed is responsible for leading the body entrusted with ensuring the continued growth and stimulation of Bahrain’s economy. As an agent for change, the Economic Development Board works in close partnerships with both the public and private sectors to oversee the economic development strategy of the Kingdom of Bahrain and to create the right climate to attract investment.

He chairs the Young Arab Leaders’ Bahrain chapter, Tamkeen, Bahrain’s labor fund, Bahrain Development Bank, Bahrain Polytechnic and the Capital Club Bahrain. He vice-chairs Bahrain Mumtalakat Holdings Company and serves as a Board member of the Bahrain Association of Banks, the Bahrain Labour Market Regulatory Authority and The Crown Prince’s International Scholarship Programme.


Julia Bacha

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Julia Bacha

Media strategist, award-winning filmmaker

Julia Bacha is a media strategist and award-winning filmmaker whose work has been exhibited at Sundance, Tribeca, Berlin, Jerusalem, and Dubai International Film Festivals, and broadcasted on the BBC, HBO, Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya television channels.

Since graduating Magna Cum Laude from Columbia University in 2003, she has strategically used film to highlight under documented stories from the Middle East. Julia started her filmmaking career in Cairo, where she co-wrote and edited Jehane Noujaim’s critically acclaimed documentary, Control Room (2004), for which she was nominated to the Writer’s Guild of America Award. Control Room marked the first time most Americans were exposed to an inside view of Al Jazeera and generated wide public debate about US media coverage during the war in Iraq.

Since 2004, Julia has been working closely with Ronit Avni to develop and implement Just Vision’s media strategy. She wrote and co-directed Encounter Point (2006), which was broadcast on Al Arabiya and endorsed by the Israeli Education ministry, directed and produced Budrus (2009), which had a palpable impact on US and Arab media coverage of nonviolent resistance in the Middle East, and directed and produced My Neighbourhood (2012), which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in April 2012. She has been a guest on numerous television shows such as Charlie Rose, MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchel Reports and Al Jazeera’s Frost over the World. For her influential work in shaping media in the US and beyond, Julia is the co-recipient of the 2009 King Hussein Leadership Prize, 2010 Search for Common Ground Award, 2011 Ridenhour Film Prize and the 2012 O Globo “Faz Diferença” Award. Her TED talk “Pay Attention to Nonviolence” has been viewed by hundreds of thousands of people worldwide.

 Twitter: @juliabacha


Ronit Avni

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Ronit Avni

Award-winning filmmaker, human right advocate

Ronit Avni is an award-winning filmmaker and human rights advocate. She is the Founder and Executive Director of Just Vision, a nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing media coverage and support for Palestinian and Israeli efforts to end the conflict without arms. Her work has been featured in major news outlets, including Newsweek, The Washington Post, The BBC, NPR, and The Economist. Avni produced the documentary film, Budrus, which was hailed in The New York Times as “this year’s must-see documentary” and has won twelve international awards. Avni directed and produced the documentary film, Encounter Point, which received several awards including the San Francisco International Film Festival Audience Award for Best Documentary. Encounter Point has screened in more than 200 cities worldwide and continues to be widely used in classrooms and community centers in America and the Middle East.

Previously, Avni trained human rights defenders worldwide to incorporate film into their advocacy efforts while working for Peter Gabriel’s human rights organization, WITNESS. She co-edited the book, Video for Change: A Guide for Advocacy and Activism (Pluto Press, UK), with staff from WITNESS. Ronit’s essay, “Inverting the Shame-Based Human Rights Documentation Model in the Context of the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict,” was published in the spring 2006 edition of American Anthropologist.

Avni has been recognized with a variety of honors, including: the King Hussein Leadership Prize, Search for Common Ground’s Common Ground Award, the Circles of Change Award, Auburn Seminary’s Lives of Commitment Award and a Joshua Venture Fellowship for young, Jewish social entrepreneurs. She is currently a United Nation’s Global Expert through the Alliance of Civilizations, a Woodhull Fellow, a Young Global Leader through the World Economic Forum and a Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Twitter: @Ronit_Avni


Sean Avery

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Sean Avery

Former NHL player, LGBTQ+ activist

Sean Avery is a former professional ice hockey player. During his career in the National Hockey League (NHL), he played left wing for the Detroit Red Wings, Los Angeles Kings, Dallas Stars and New York Rangers. He gained recognition for his agitating playing style and controversial behavior both on and off the ice. After retiring in 2012, Avery began working at Lipman, an advertising and creative agency in New York City. In May 2011, Avery recorded a video for the New Yorkers for Marriage Equality campaign, in support of same-sex marriage. Avery was believed to be the first athlete in New York to publicly voice his support for same-sex marriage. In May 2012, Avery joined the board of directors of Athlete Ally, a nonprofit organization focused on ending homophobia and trans-phobia in sports by educating those in the athletic community and empowering them to take a stand against prejudice. His book, Offside: My Life Crossing the Line was published in September, 2018. 

Mr. Avery was hosted by The Common Good in 2011: Summer Cocktail Party with Manhattan Magazine - August 3, 2011.

Twitter: @imseanavery


Charles Atkins

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Charles Atkins

Investment banker, Executive Chairman of Premier League Basketball in the United Kingdom

Charles N. Atkins has more than 30 years of experience in capital markets investment banking, law and government. Charles is a Partner at Maroon Capital Group LLC; Executive Chairman for Premier League Basketball Holdings Ltd; and CEO of Atkins Capital Strategies LLC.

Charles has been awarded 2 U.S. patents for innovative financing structures.

Charles’ legal and governmental experience includes practicing corporate law at the Washington, D.C. office of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, serving as Associate Assistant to the President in the Carter Administration and Legislative Counsel to United States Senator David L. Boren (D-OK). Charles served on the Presidential Transition Committee for the first Clinton Administration, and was appointed by President Clinton to serve on the Advisory Committee of the U.S. Export-Import Bank.

Atkins attended The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards – May 21, 2018.


Munir Akram

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Munir Akram

Former Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the UN

Munir Akram was the Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the United Nations from 2002 to 2008.

He has represented Pakistan in numerous United Nations bodies and international conferences, including the Security Council and the Economic and Social Council. At the UN, he was twice the President of the Security Council (May 2003 and May 2004); President of the Economic and Social Council (2005); Chairperson of the Working Party on the Accession of Saudi Arabia to WTO (2005); and Co-Chair for UN Management Reform (2005).

Munir Akram is a prolific writer and has lectured widely on various strategic, political and economic issues. His most recent published work in 2011 is as a contributing author to ‘Pakistan – Beyond the Crisis State.’ He has been awarded Hilal-i-Quaid-i-Azam by the President of Pakistan for his selfless service and devotion to the country.


Ron Agam

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Ron Agam

French-Israeli artist, humanitarian

Ron Agam is a French-Israeli painter and pho­tog­ra­pher cur­rently based in New York, although he trav­els widely for his work. His pho­tographs have been exhib­ited and pub­lished in numer­ous news­pa­pers and mag­a­zines such as Newsweek and Time, as well as books in Israel, South Amer­ica, and the United States.

In late 2001, Agam created a series based on his photographic work at Ground Zero on September 11. In 2008, he received the Chevalier of the Legion of Honor by the government of France, the highest honor in France.  In 2009 he donated the entire collection of photographs to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. These works are now part of the museum’s permanent collection.

That same year, Agam also cre­ated the largest and most dynamic internet sup­port page for Iran, 100 Mil­lion Face­book Mem­bers for Democ­racy in Iran. Peo­ple from all denom­i­na­tions joined to express sol­i­dar­ity for the Iran­ian peo­ple and their strug­gle for freedom. His commitment to art and political efforts demonstrate his esteemed position as an artist and humanitarian.

Agam spoke on a TCG panel for Social Media, Politics and Change on July 26th, 2011, and at The Common Good Forum and American Spirit Awards on June 2nd, 2014.

Twitter: @RonAgam

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Ai Weiwei

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Ai Weiwei

Artist

Ai Weiwei is a Chinese artist and activist. His activity as a dissident has gone hand in hand with his artistic career and he has continued to produce work testifying to his political beliefs while at the same time making plenty of room for creativity and experimentation. (1)

After returning to China from his studies abroad, Ai contributed to the establishment of Beijing’s East Village, a community of avant-garde artists. In 1997, he co-founded the China Art Archives & Warehouse (CAAW), one of the first independent art spaces in China. In 2003, Ai started his own architecture practice, FAKE Design. In 2007, as a participant of documenta 12, Ai brought 1001 Chinese citizens to Kassel as part of his Fairytale project. In 2008, Ai and the Swiss architecture team of Herzog and de Meuron designed the Beijing National Stadium. Recently, Ai Weiwei’s film Human Flow participed in the 74th Venice International Film Festival. (1)

In 2012, Ai Weiwei was awarded the Václav Havel Prize for Creative Dissent by the Human Rights Foundation and in 2015, was awarded the Ambassador of Conscience Award by Amnesty International for his actions in support of the defense of human rights.
(1)

Weiwei was hosted by The Common Good for a discussion on Art and Activism in Amsterdam with Ai Weiwei.

Twitter: @aiww



(1) Material from the Galleria Continua website.

Governor Jay Inslee

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Governor Jay Inslee

Governor of Washington State, 2020 presidential candidate

Governor Jay Inslee has led the State of Washington since 2013 and has made fighting climate change his number one priority in his presidential campaign. As governor, he has enacted policies that make Washington a national leader in clean energy, clean air and clean water. He created a new Clean Energy Fund that has invested over $100 million in developing innovative energy techniques and growing clean energy jobs, as well as the Clean Energy Institute at the University of Washington, which is pioneering research into next-generation renewable energy technologies like solar and battery storage. Prior to his governorship, Inslee represented Washington’s 1st and 4th Districts in the House, where he voted against the Iraq War and championed investments to grow America’s clean energy industries.

Inslee was hosted by The Common Good on May 20th, 2019: Presidential Candidates Series: Governor Jay Inslee.

Twitter: @JayInslee


Lesley Stahl

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Lesley Stahl

American Television Journalist

Lesley Stahl is one of America’s most honored and experienced broadcast journalists. Her rich career has been marked by political scoops, surprising features and award-winning foreign reporting. She has been a 60 Minutes correspondent since March 1991.

Prior to joining 60 Minutes, Stahl served as CBS News White House correspondent – the first woman to hold that job – during the Carter and Reagan presidencies and part of the term of George H. W. Bush. Her reports appeared frequently on the CBS Evening News, first with Walter Cronkite, then with Dan Rather, and on other CBS News broadcasts. During much of that time, she also served as moderator of Face The Nation, CBS News’ Sunday public-affairs broadcast (September 1983–May 1991). 

Stahl was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Emmy in September 2003 and her first Emmy for reporting on a bombing in Beirut for the CBS Evening News in 1983. Her Face The Nation interview with Sen. John Tower won Stahl her second statuette. Her 60 Minutes reports “How He Won the War,” about former FDA Commissioner David Kessler’s battle with the tobacco industry, and “Punishing Saddam,” which exposed the plight of Iraqi citizens, mostly children, suffering the effects of the United Nations sanctions against Iraq, were both Emmy winners. “Punishing Saddam” also won Stahl electronic journalism’s highest honor, an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Silver Baton.

Lesley Stahl was hosted by The Common Good in 2013: Assessing the Presidency with Lesley Stahl, Douglas Brinkley, Jonathan Alter and Ed Rollins – April 11th, 2013. As part of The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards - May 10, 2019, she spoke on the panel “Journalism and Democracy” alongside Sir Harry Evans and Tom Brokaw, and was presented with the American Spirit Award for Courage in Journalism.

Twitter: @LesleyRStahl


Alexandria Villasenor

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Alexandria Villaseñor

Climate activist

Alexandria Villaseñor is a climate activist and New York City resident. She co-founded the United States Youth Climate Strike, is the founder of Earth Uprising, and is a proud participant of Fridays for Future, a movement started by fellow activist Greta Thunberg. (1)

After inhaling smoke from the Camp Fire in California in November of 2018, Villaseñor became ill due to her asthma. She spent her recovery investigating climate change, which had exacerbated the fire. Villaseñor soon joined the organization Zero Hour, which works to promote young voices in the climate conversation. (1)

Villaseñor spoke at The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards, May 10th, 2019, and received the Changemaker Scholarship.

Twitter: @AlexandriaV2005



(1) Information from Wikipedia.

Ari Melber

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Ari Melber

MSNBC Chief Legal Correspondent, anchor, host of The Beat with Ari Melber

Ari Melber is an American Emmy-winning reporter, lawyer, and writer. He serves as a Chief Legal Correspondent for MSNBC where he covers the Justice Department, Supreme Court, FBI and legal issues. He serves as journalist for NBC News and also host of MSNBC’s The Beat with Ari Melber.

The Detroit Free Press named The Beat with Ari Melber one of the “best” TV shows of 2017. Vanity Fair reported that the show established itself as an influential and “vocal critic” of Facebook’s impact on democracy, while The Hollywood Reporter stated that Melber’s show is proving to be a “success,” and “there are few cable news hosts more perfectly suited” to breaking down legal issues in the news. In a 2014 profile, the Columbia Journalism Review dubbed Melber a “rising star” who “wants to solve problems.”

Before joining MSNBC, Melber spent four years practicing First Amendment law, and served as a legislative aide in the U.S. Senate.  He is a former columnist for Politico and Reuters, and his writing has been published in several books and a variety of news outlets, including the Washington Post, the Atlantic, the Nation and the New York Daily News, among other publications.

The Common Good has hosted Melber numerous times, including on the panel for Social Media, Politics and Change on July 26th, 2011 and at The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards 2017. Recently, he participated in the The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards on May 10, 2019, as the moderator for the “Renewing Democracy” panel featuring Cohen Curtis, Max Boot, Nicole Austin-Hillery, and Michael Waldman. He will host a discussion with political consultant Frank Luntz in August 2019 [RSVP here].

Twitter: @AriMelber


Max Boot

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Max Boot

American author, consultant, editorialist, lecturer, military historian

Max Boot is a historian, best-selling author, columnist, and national-security analyst who has been called one of the “world’s leading authorities on armed conflict” by the International Institute for Strategic Studies. He is the Jeane J. Kirkpatrick Senior Fellow in National Security Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, a columnist for the Washington Post, and a Global Affairs Analyst for CNN.

Max Boot was a senior foreign policy adviser to John McCain’s presidential campaign in 2007–08, Mitt Romney’s campaign in 2011–12, and Marco Rubio’s campaign in 2015-2016. He also served as an adviser to U.S. commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan. He has lectured on behalf of the U.S. State Department and at many military institutions, including the Army, Navy, and Air War Colleges, the Australian Defense College, the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare School, West Point, and the Naval Academy.

Before joining the Council in 2002, Boot spent eight years as a writer and editor at the Wall Street Journal, and the last five as op-ed editor. From 1992 to 1994 he was an editor and writer at the Christian Science Monitor. In more recent years, Boot has been a columnist for Foreign Policy, a contributing editor to the Los Angeles Times, a member of the USA Today board of contributors, and a regular contributor to many other publications including the New York Times and Wall Street Journal. He serves on the boards of Intelligence Squared U.S. and the Renew Democracy Initiative. In 2018 Max Boot was named one of America’s “Great Immigrants” by the Carnegie Corporation and one of the 50 most influential Jewish Americans by the Forward newspaper. In 2007, he won the Eric Breindel Award for Excellence in Opinion Journalism. In 2004, he was named by the World Affairs Councils of America as one of “the 500 most influential people in the United States in the field of foreign policy.”

Boot participated in the The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards, 2019 on May 10, 2019, speaking on the “Renewing Democracy” panel with Cohen Curtis, Nicole Austin-Hillery, and Michael Waldman, moderated by Ari Melber.

Twitter: @MaxBoot


Nicole Austin-Hillery

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Nicole Austin-Hillery

Human rights advocate, lawyer, Executive Director of Human Rights Watch US Program

Nicole Austin-Hillery is Human Rights Watch's inaugural U.S. Program Executive Director. In this newly created role, Ms. Austin-Hillery leads Human Rights Watch’s efforts to end violations in abusive systems within the United States. Her work focuses on improving the U.S. immigration system, tackling race discrimination, rights problems within the domestic criminal justice system, and advocating for national security policies informed by international human rights standards.

Previously, Austin-Hillery was the first Director and Counsel of The Brennan Center’s Washington, D.C. office which she opened in March 2008. At the Brennan Center, she oversaw the growth and development of the Center’s advocacy and policy development work in Washington and served as its chief representative before Congress and the Executive Branch.

Austin-Hillery has testified before state and local legislative bodies as well as Congress. She has published numerous pieces for major news outlets including Time Magazine, The Hill, CNN.com and a host of others. She is a frequent speaker on a host of progressive issues.

Austin-Hillery participated in the The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards - May 10, 2019, speaking on the “Renewing Democracy” panel with Cohen Curtis, Max Boot, and Michael Waldman, moderated by Ari Melber.

Twitter: @NicoleAustinHil