Big Think

Welcome to Big Think.  |  Register or Log in

  • Home
  • Special Series
  • Topics
  • Experts
  • Blogs
  • Ideafeed
  • Good Word

Experts

Nina Hachigian Follow

The Center For American Progress; Author

  • Vid_6876_111x84

    Nina Hachigian on Iran

    Nina Hachigian

    Nina Hachigian on Iran Read More

    June 6, 2008   |  In Politics & Policy

  • Vid_6875_111x84

    Should there be a boycott of the Olympics?

    Nina Hachigian

    Should there be a boycott of the Olympics? Read More

    June 6, 2008   |  In World

  • Vid_6874_111x84

    Nina Hachigian: China is Not a Direct Security Threat

    Nina Hachigian

    Is China a security partner or security threat? < Read More

    June 6, 2008   |  In World

  • Vid_6873_111x84

    Is the American Empire in Decline?

    Nina Hachigian

    Is the American Empire in decline? Read More

    June 6, 2008   |  In Politics & Policy

  • Vid_6872_111x84

    Nina Hachigian: Why Domestic Policy is Linked to Foreign Policy

    Nina Hachigian

    How does domestic policy link to foreign policy? Read More

    June 6, 2008   |  In Politics & Policy

  • Vid_6871_111x84

    Nina Hachigian On the New U.S. Foreign Policy Objectives

    Nina Hachigian

    Nina Hachigian on the next American century. Read More

    June 6, 2008   |  In Politics & Policy

  • Vid_6870_111x84

    Nina Hachigian: The Next American Century

    Nina Hachigian

    Why write this book now? Read More

    June 6, 2008   |  In Politics & Policy

User_rfaq_c9bc5ec3a Nina Hachigian is a Senior Fellow at American Progress. Based in Los Angeles, she is the co-author of The Next American Century: How the U.S. Can Thrive as Other Powers Rise (Simon & Schuster, 2008). She focuses on great power relationships, international institutions, and U.S. foreign policy. Prior to American Progress, Hachigian was a senior political scientist at RAND Corporation and served as the director of the RAND Center for Asia Pacific Policy for four years. Before RAND, she had an international affairs fellowship from the Council on Foreign Relations during which she researched the Internet in China. From 1998 to 1999, Hachigian was on the staff of the National Security Council in the White House.Hachigian has published numerous reports, book chapters, and journal articles, including essays in Foreign Affairs and The Washington Quarterly as well as op-ed pieces appearing in the The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, and the South China Morning Post, among others. Her earlier book was The Information Revolution in Asia (RAND, 2003). She has been a guest on "Real Time with Bill Maher," Fox News, CNN International, the "Tavis Smiley Show," and "All Things Considered." She is on the board of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Affairs at Stanford University and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Hachigian received her B.S. from Yale University and her J.D. from Stanford Law School.

Connect

  • My Employer
  • My Center for Americ…
  • The Next American Ce…
  • My Book Discussion

Editors' Choice

  • Ghogm7zazxgtp5-h5hodoxomdio_bope

    Neil Giuliano on Celebrities and Gay Rights

    Neil Giuliano

  • 0arufsgffxutwbjn5hndoxomdio3rt5z

    Three Steps To Outliving Death Itself

    Aubrey de Grey

People's Choice

  • U_tnbwxjuvzy_lbh5hnjoxomdio8hmyi

    Advice to Aspiring Novelists: Don’t Shoot Yourself

    John Irving

  • Qj20n55c4_1lxkzh5hyjoxomdio92oii

    Five Ways to Become Happier Today

    Tal Ben-Shahar

  • J8v2s5e778xnsp2n5hcjoxomdio82tff

    Big Think Interview with Kay Redfield Jamison

    Kay Redfield Jamison

  • Davinci

    Richard Dawkins on Why Science is Art

    Richard Dawkins

  • Iprb884q6w6xe2dh5hnzoxomdiozyg5h

    America's New Engine of Growth

    George Soros

Sign Up for our Mailing List

Connect

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
  • Privacy
  • Terms of Use

Original content is for Non-commercial use under Creative Commons. Except where otherwise noted.
Some Rights Reserved. Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.