Paul Sullivan
Professor of Economics
National Defense University
Adjunct Professor, Security Studies
Georgetown University
|
4th and P Streets, SW
Washington, DC 20319
(t) 202-685-4237
(f) 202-685-4175
sullivanpj@ndu.edu
pjs57@Geoergetown.edu
|
Areas of Expertise Energy, Economics of the Middle East, Egypt, Libya, Algeria, Morocco, Mauritania, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, U.S.-Islamic relations, U.S.-Iranian relations, U.S.-Arab Relations
Dr. Sullivan has been a professor of economics at the National Defense University since July 1999. He has been an adjunct professor of security studies at Georgetown, where he teaches a course on "Energy and Security", since the Fall of 2005. He is also a member of the Energy Consensus Group, and a recent graduate of the Seminar XXI Program at MIT. For six years previous to returning to the US, he taught and researched at the American University in Cairo. He has traveled widely in the Middle East and North Africa. Dr. Sullivan has published articles on the political economy and economic diplomacy of Egypt, Jordan and Syria, the political economy of Iraq, the economic effects of the Gulf War of 1991, the economics of oil in the Middle East, the economics of the Palestinian territories, economic reforms in Egypt, Islam, US-Islamic relations and other issues. He has spoken to a wide variety of audiences on issues related to energy, Islam, economics, and other issues, including being the keynote speaker at the 2005 Sagan Colloquium. He has been part of various working groups on Libya, Iran, Iran, "A New Marshall Plan for Energy and Water in the Developing World" at the Atlantic Council, and was an active participant in the PILPG roundtables on the Iraqi constitution. Dr. Sullivan has been quoted in the media on five continents on a wide variety of issues. He had a column, "Cairo to Calcutta," in The Middle East Times. Dr. Sullivan received his B.A. (summa cum laude, junior Phi Beta Kappa) from Brandeis University and his M.A., M.Phil. and Ph.D. (with highest honors) degrees in economics from Yale University.
|