Epstein is the new director of AAAS’s center for science, technology & security policy
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.1140
Gerald Epstein
“We’re delighted to have been able to recruit Gerald Epstein, a great expert in both nuclear and biological security issues, to AAAS,” said Alan I. Leshner, chief executive officer of AAAS and executive publisher of Science.
“I’m thrilled at being able to join the center,” Epstein said, “and I look forward to working with its first-rate staff to ensure that security policy is made with the best scientific and technical input. I’m also grateful that Norman Neureiter, who built the Center, has agreed to stay on as senior adviser. I will work to continue the Center*s establishedrecord of connecting scientists and government.”
From 2003 through 2009, Epstein was a senior fellow for science and security in the CSIS Homeland Security Program
He also taught a course on “Science, Technology, and Homeland Security” as an Adjunct Professor with the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service
He came to CSIS from the Institute for Defense Analyses
From 1996 to 2001, he worked at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
His responsibilities at OSTP included technologies to counter terrorism and to protect the nation’s critical infrastructures; chemical and biological weapons nonproliferation and arms control; missile defense; strategic arms control; the nuclear weapon stockpile stewardship program; export controls; and national security/emergency preparedness telecommunications.
From 1983 to 1989 and again from 1991 until its demise in 1995, he worked at the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment
From 1989 to 1991, he directed a project at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government
Epstein is a Fellow of the American Physical Society
He serves on the Biological Sciences Experts Group for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
He received SB degrees in physics and in electrical engineering from MIT and a PhD in physics from the University of California at Berkeley.
More about the authors
Paul Guinnessy, pguinnes@aip.org