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Bruce Gregory
Director and Research Professor, Public Diplomacy Institute
Phone: (202) 994-0389
Fax: (202) 994-5806
E-mail: BGregory@gwu.edu
Office: MPA 410
Expertise
Public diplomacy, media and national security, strategic international communication, national security strategy and process, U.S. international broadcasting
Courses Taught
PCM 140, Media and Foreign Policy
PCM 190, Information, Media, and National Security
Selected Works
Bruce Gregory compiles an annotated list of public diplomacy books, articles, and websites that is circulated by email approximately once a month. The list is intended for public diplomacy teachers, researchers and others who may be interested. If you wish to subscribe, send an email to BGregory@gwu.edu.
Background
Bruce Gregory is director of the Public Diplomacy Institute at The George Washington University and a research professor at the University’s School of Media and Public Affairs.
He is a member of the Defense Science Board’s 2004 Summer Study Task Force on Strategic Communication, the Council on Foreign Relations Task Force on Public Diplomacy, the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs, and the Public Diplomacy Council. He was the Council's executive director from 2001-2004.
Gregory served on the National Defense University’s faculty from 1998-2001 where he taught courses on information, media, and national security at the National War College. From 1985-1998, he was executive director of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy. Prior to retiring after 34 years of government service, he served as coordinator on the Department of State’s Response to Terrorism Coalition Working Group on Public Diplomacy and as the State Department's executive secretary on the Defense Science Board's 2001 Task Force on Managed Information Dissemination.
He has taught public diplomacy at American University's School of International Service and lectured at the Department of State's Foreign Service Institute and the National Defense University's Information Management Resources College.
He is a recipient of the Department of State's Superior Honor Award and was an American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow.
Education
M.A., International Relations, American University, 1967
B.A., History, Barrington College, 1963
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