Jonathan Paris

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Person.png Jonathan Paris PowerbaseRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(academic)
BornJonathan S. Paris

Jonathan S. Paris is an adjunct fellow, The Hudson Institute, Washington DC.

From a HJS Event profile:

Jonathan Paris an analyst of Middle Eastern and Islamic movements, and an Adjunct Fellow with the Hudson Institute. From 1995 to 2000 he worked as Middle East Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. He has just completed a study of Europe and its Muslim population for the U.S. Department of Defense, having previously produced reports on the Future of Saudi Arabia, and Radical Islam in Europe.
Mr. Paris has commented on CNN, BBC, Sky News, Fox News, and NBC News, and has written for Foreign Affairs, the Financial Times, New York Sun, Baltimore Sun, and Asharq Alawsat, an Arab daily newspaper based in London. He co-edited the first book on Indonesia’s democratic transition, The Politics of Post-Suharto Indonesia (Council on Foreign Relations, 1999), and from 1994-97 lectured at Yale University on Islam and Politics in the Middle East, and the Arab-Israeli conflict. A Cleveland native, he is a graduate of Yale and Stanford Law School.

Jonathan Paris has just completed a detailed study of European approaches towards Radical Islam, with a particular focus on the UK's efforts. His study compares the ideological challenges facing Western Europe today with those encountered during the Cold War. It provides a detailed analysis of the ways in which demographics, economics and segregated communities affect social cohesion. It also examines what various branches of the UK government are doing to counter extremism, probes the relationship between foreign policy and radicalisation, and details the inadequacy of the government’s current efforts. Mr. Paris will present his findings, and suggest ways in which Britain can celebrate its values in a way that includes and even entices moderate opinion.[1]

From an updated HJS profile:

Jonathan S. Paris is a London-based political analyst and Fellow at the Hudson Institute, a think tank in Washington, D.C. Formerly a Middle East Fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations and a Senior Associate Member of St. Antony's College, he moved to London in 2001 and concentrates on transnational threats and radicalisation in Europe, the Middle East and South Asia, and Transatlantic relations
He recently completed a study on extremism and counter-radicalisation in Europe for the US Government, and is currently preparing a study on the future of Pakistan. He has been Senior Advisor to the Chairman of MBI International since 2003 and will be a Research Associate at the Buckingham University Center for Security and Intelligence Studies beginning in October 2008.
He taught at Yale University on Islam and Politics and on the Middle East from 1994-97 and co-edited The Politics of Post-Suharto Indonesia (CFR/Brookings 1998). A member of the IISS in London and the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, Mr. Paris is a graduate of Yale University (Magna Cum Laude, B.A., Political and Economic Systems, 1975) and Stanford Law School (J.D., 1978). His email is Jonathansparis@yahoo.com[2]

Contact, References and Resources

Contact

UKmob: +44(0)78 1069 8484
USmob: +197 848 3389
Email: jonathansparis@yahoo.com

Resources

Neocon Europe Jonathan Paris

 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Herzliya Conference/200621 January 200624 January 2006Israel
Tel Aviv
Reichman University
A 2006 conference on Israeli security needs.
Herzliya Conference/200721 January 200724 January 2007Israel
Tel Aviv
Reichman University
"The conference examined the array of dangers, threats and difficulties Israel has faced since early 2006, identified a broad web of problems in all of the fundamental strata upon which national security is based, and proposed strategies for action."
Herzliya Conference/20092 February 20094 February 2009Israel
Tel Aviv
Reichman University
Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.


References

  1. Henry Jackson Society event: "UK Counter–Radicalisation Strategy: A shift from accommodation to confrontation?", House of Commons, 2 July 2008
  2. HJS Event profile for 2 July 2008 — appearing in the website.