Dartmouth Events

How Everything Became War and the Military Became Everything

Rosa Brooks

Tuesday, May 1, 2018
4:30pm – 6:00pm
Filene Auditorium, Moore Building
Intended Audience(s): Public
Categories:

How Everything Became War and the Military Became Everything

Rosa Brooks

Associate Dean, Graduate Programs, Professor of Law, Georgetown.

Weekly columnist for Foreign Policy, and serves as a Senior Fellow at New America.

Counselor to Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy, 2009-2011.

Areas of Expertise, Human Rights Law, International Law, National Security, Military, War and Peace

 

Tuesday, May 1, 4:30pm, Filene Auditorium, Moore Hall. Free and open to all.

 

Rosa Brooks teaches courses on international law, national security, constitutional law, and other subjects. She also writes a weekly column for Foreign Policy, and serves as a Senior Fellow at New America.

From 2009-2011, Brooks served as Counselor to Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy. During her time at the Defense Department, Brooks also founded the Office for Rule of Law and International Humanitarian Policy, and also led a major overhaul of the Defense Department's strategic communication and information operations efforts. In July 2011, she received the Secretary of Defense Medal for Outstanding Public Service.

From 2005-2009, Brooks was a weekly op-ed columnist for the Los Angeles Times, and served as faculty director of GULC's Human Rights Institute. In 2006-2007, Brooks served as Special Counsel to the President at the Open Society Institute in New York. From 2001-2006, she was an associate professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, where she taught human rights law, constitutional law, and criminal law.

Brooks has also served as a senior advisor at the US Department of State, a consultant for Human Rights Watch, a fellow at the Carr Center at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, a board member of Amnesty International USA, a Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a lecturer at Yale Law School, a member of the Executive Council of the American Society of International Law, a member of the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on Fragile States, the board of the National Security Network and the Steering Committee of the White Oak Foreign Policy Leaders Project.

In addition to her popular writing, Brooks has written numerous scholarly articles on international law, failed states, post-conflict reconstruction and the rule of law, human rights, terrorism and the law of war.

Her most recent book, How Everything Became War and the Military Became Everything, was published in 2016 by Simon and Schuster.  She is also the author of Can Might Make Rights? The Rule of Law After Military Interventions (with Jane Stromseth and David Wippman), published in 2006 by Cambridge University Press. Her government and NGO work has involved field research in Iraq, Afghanistan, Indonesia, Israel, Palestine, Kosovo, China, Russia, Ghana, Kenya, Uganda, South Africa, and Sierra Leone, among other places.

Brooks received her A.B. from Harvard in 1991 (history and literature), followed by a master's degree from Oxford in 1993 (social anthropology) and a law degree from Yale in 1996.

Sponsored by the Dickey Center for International Understanding. Free and open to all. 

 

For more information, contact:
Sharon Tribou-St. Martin

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.