|
Secure World Foundation
314 W. Charles St. Superior, Colorado 80027, USA Tel: 303.554.1560 Fax: 303.554.1562 info@swfound.org Secure World Foundation 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20036, USA Tel: 202.462.1842 Fax: 202.462.1843 Secure World Foundation c/o European Space Policy Institute Schwarzenbergplatz 6 A-1030 Vienna, Austria Tel: +43 1 718 11 18 35 Fax: +43 1 718 11 18 99 |
Staff and consultantsStaff Dr. Ray Williamson, Executive Director James D. Rendleman, Colonel, USAF (Ret.), Deputy Director Victoria Samson, Washington Office Director Ben Baseley-Walker, Legal and Policy Advisor Brian Weeden, Technical Advisor Jenna Martin, Web Project Manager Leonard David, Research Associate Tiffany Chow, Washington Office Assistant
Agnieszka Lukaszczyk, Space Policy Consultant Dr. Suzanne Metlay, Education and Outreach Consultant Barbara David, Consultant
Ray is also an external faculty member of the International Space University (ISU), Illkirch, France, teaching general space policy and remote sensing for the ISU Masters and Space Studies programs. He is editor of Imaging Notes and serves on the editorial board of the journal Space Policy. As a member of the International Academy of Astronautics, Dr. Williamson serves on Commission Five: Space Policies, Law & Economics. He is the author of more than 100 articles on space policy, remote sensing and space security and author or editor of nine books on outer space, the technologies of historic preservation, and American Indian astronomy, myth and ritual. From 1979 to 1995, he was a Senior Analyst and then Senior Associate in the Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) of the U.S. Congress. While at OTA, Dr. Williamson led more than a dozen space policy studies requested by Congressional committees. Ray received his B.A. in physics from the Johns Hopkins University and his Ph.D. in astronomy from the University of Maryland. After two years on the astronomy faculty of the University of Hawaii, he taught philosophy, literature, mathematics, physics and astronomy at St. John's College, Annapolis. For the last five years he also served as Assistant Dean of the College . To see Ray's presentations, writings and interviews related to the Foundation's mission, please go here.
James D. Rendleman, Colonel, USAF (Ret.), Deputy Director To see James' publications, please go here.
Previously, she was a Senior Analyst with the Center for Defense Information (CDI), where her areas of interest included missile defense, nuclear reductions, and space security issues. Prior to her time at CDI, Samson was the Senior Policy Associate at the Coalition to Reduce Nuclear Dangers, a consortium of arms control groups in the Washington, D.C., area. She previously worked as a subcontractor on war-gaming scenarios for the Missile Defense Agency's Directorate of Intelligence. Samson is the author of numerous op-eds, analytical pieces, journal articles, and electronic updates on missile defense and space security matters. She has an M.A. in international relations from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and holds a B.A. in political science with a specialization in international relations from UCLA. To see Victoria's presentations, writings and interviews related to the Foundation's mission, please go here.
A British national, Ben works on legal and policy issues related to space security. He has worked in the policy and legal field in a variety of settings and countries including Chile, Kenya, Ethiopia and the Netherlands. From 2006 to 2007 Ben lived in Kenya working for the United Nations and the Kenyan Government. He is also currently the Co-Chair of the Vienna-based Space Generation Advisory Council. Ben is an alumnus of the University of Edinburgh and the Universiteit van Amsterdam from which he graduated with a M.A. degree in Politics and an LLM degree in International and European Law respectively. He is a graduate of the International Space University Space Studies Programme (2007, Beijing). To see Ben's presentations, writings and interviews related to the Foundation's mission, please go here.
Brian spent nine years as an officer in the U.S. Air Force working in space and ICBM operations. From 2004 through 2007 he was part of US Strategic Command's Joint Space Operations Center where he directed the orbital analyst training program and developed tactics, techniques and procedures for space situational awareness and space control. As a certified orbital analyst, he was part of a crew of military personnel that track all artificial objects in Earth orbit and produce the satellite catalog. Brian has a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Clarkson University, M.S. in Space Studies from the University of North Dakota and is a graduate of the International Space University Space Studies Program (2007, Beijing). To see Brian's presentations, writings and interviews related to the Foundation's mission, please go here.
With over ten years experience as an offline and online journalist coupled with an extensive background in science, Jenna Martin possesses a unique skill set. As former Senior Editor for Epilepsy.com, she not only catapulted epilepsy.com into a Webby Award winning website, but also produced all communications to help further the mission and brand awareness of The Epilepsy Project. Since then, she has been a communications and Web Strategist for such clients as Cisco Systems, NYU, The Michael J. Fox Foundation and The National Parkinson's Foundation. Jenna has also written for LIVE Strong and been a guest speaker on radio talk shows like Disabiilty Matters with Joyce Bender.
Leonard is a space writer/journalist and has been reporting on the evolution of world space programs since the 1950s. Over those years, his work has been seen in a wide ranging number of publications, from the Financial Times, Space News, Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, Sky and Telescope to Aerospace America and Foreign Policy magazine. In the dot.com world, Leonard has served in the past as SPACE.com's senior space writer, covering a wide array of space-related activities, including the developing story of entrepreneurial space ventures. > Leonard has been a consultant to various industrial and governmental organization in the past, including NASA. He served as the Director of Research in the late 1980s for the National Commission on Space, a congressionally-mandated group that looked at the long-term future of the U.S. civilian space exploration and applications agenda. To see Leonard's presentations, writings and interviews related to the Foundation's mission, please go here. Tiffany Chow is the Washington Office Assistant for Secure World Foundation, where she provides support to the Washington Office Director and SWF's Legal and Policy Advisor. Prior to joining Secure World Foundation, Chow worked for the Center for American Politics and Public Policy at UCLA. Before that, she interned with the Monterey Institute for International Studies' Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) in Washington, DC where she provided research support on a wide array of topics included export control issues in the United Arab Emirates, United Nations Security Council Resolution 1540, and the potential for microreactors to be used for the proliferation of chemical weapons. Chow held this internship while participating in the prestigious UCLA Quarter in Washington program, where she also completed a large-scale independent research paper entitled "Reevaluating the Nonproliferation Regime: An Application of John Ruggie's Regime Theory." Chow received her B.A. from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where she double majored in European Studies and Political Science, with an emphasis in International Relations. She has also studied at the University of Cambridge in England and in Rome, Italy. Currently, Chow is working towards an M.A. in International Relations from Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, DC. |
|
© Copyright 2009 Secure World Foundation, All rights reserved. |
Home
Press Releases
Resources
About Us
Contact Us
Site Map
Site By Customer Paradigm |