Status
Professor
Contact
Tbruneau@nps.edu
Research Interests
Civil-military relations; Latin America |
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Biography
Thomas Bruneau is a Distinguished Professor of National Security Affairs in the Naval Postgraduate School's Department of National Security Affairs. He joined the Department in 1987 after having taught in the Department of Political Science at McGill University in Montreal, Canada since 1969. Dr. Bruneau became Chairman of the Department in 1989, and continued in that position until 1995. He became Director of the Center for Civil Military Relations in November 2000, a position he held until December 2004. He has researched and written extensively on Latin America, especially Brazil, and Portugal. Dr. Bruneau has published more than a dozen books in English and Portuguese as well as articles in journals including Latin American Research Review, Comparative Politics, Third World Quarterly, Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs, Journal of Latin American Studies, Encyclopedia of Democracy, and South European Society and Politics.
He has two new books coming out. He is co-editor, with Scott Tollefson, of Soldiers and Statesmen: The Institutional Bases of Democratic Civilian Control (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006, forthcoming). His second book, also to be published by University of Texas Press, for which he serves as editor, is tentatively titled Democracy and Effectiveness: Intelligence Reform in New and Established Democracies.
A native of California, Professor Bruneau received his B.A. from California State University at San Jose and his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley. He was a Fulbright scholar to India (1962-63) and to Brazil (1985-86), and has been awarded fellowships from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the International Development Research Centre, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Gulbenkian Foundation, and the Luso-American Development Foundation . He has traveled extensively in Latin America, Europe, and Africa with shorter trips to Asia. He has been leading seminars for CCMR for six years in Latin America and Southern Africa.
In addition to his position as Professor in the NSA Department, Professor Bruneau was the Academic Associate for the curriculum in International Security and Civil-Military Relations from its founding in 1996 until 2002. Between 1998 and 2001 he served as rapporteur of the Defense Policy Board which provides the Secretary of Defense and his staff with independent and informed advice on questions of national security and defense policy.
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