William J. Dobson
William J. "Will " Dobson is an American journalist and author who writes frequently on foreign affairs and international politics. He is the co-editor of the Journal of Democracy . Previous roles include Chief International Editor at NPR and the Politics and Foreign Affairs Editor for Slate .[ 1]
Early life
Dobson was born on a naval base in North Kingston , Rhode Island . His father, W. Joel Dobson, was a Lt. Commander in the U.S. Navy . His mother, Barbara Joyce Dobson, is an English teacher.
Dobson grew up in Spartanburg, South Carolina , and attended Spartanburg Day School . He received a Bachelor of Arts summa cum laude from Middlebury College . He later earned a master's degree in East Asian Studies from Harvard University and a Juris Doctor cum laude from Harvard Law School . He lives in Washington, DC with his wife and two children.[ 2]
Career
From 2004 to 2008, Dobson was the Managing Editor of Foreign Policy magazine. During his tenure at Foreign Policy , the magazine was nominated for a National Magazine Award five years in a row – the only magazine of its size to receive five consecutive nominations – and won the top prize twice.[ 3]
Previously, he served as the Senior Editor for Asia at Newsweek International and as Associate Editor at Foreign Affairs .[ 4] He has also been a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace .[ 5]
During the height of the Arab Spring , he wrote daily pieces on modern authoritarianism for the Washington Post’s editorial page.[ 2] While reporting from Cairo, Dobson wrote the first account of the Egyptian military’s torture of female protestors in Tahrir Square.
Dobson's first book, The Dictator's Learning Curve [ 6] was published by Doubleday in 2012. The non-fiction book is an analysis of modern authoritarianism and has been reviewed by various media.[ 7] The Washington Post , New York Times , Financial Times , and Publishers Weekly were among those giving positive reviews.[ 8]
Awards
Dobson was named a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in 2006.[ 9] In 2003, he was named the U.S. Rapporteur for the World Economic Forum's East Asia Summit.[ 10] The Singapore International Foundation awarded him a Distinguished Visitor Fellowship in 2008.[ 11] The East-West Center awarded him a Senior Journalist Fellowship for Southeast Asia (2006) and an Journalism Fellowship (2008). Dobson was a Knight Media Fellow (2003) to the Salzburg Global Seminar , and later a Freeman Fellow in U.S.-East Asian Relations (2007).[ 12]
Middlebury College recognized him with an Alumni Achievement Award in 2011.[ 13] Dobson is also a 1994 Truman Scholar .[ 14]
Published works
Books (Editor)
Books (Author)
Op-eds and articles
The Mandarin in the Machine , Journal of Democracy , October 2022
A Glimpse of the Way Forward , Journal of Democracy , July 2020
The Ghost of Hugo Chavez , Slate , March 6, 2013
Putin the Pitiful , Slate , December 28, 2012
The East Is Crimson , Slate , May 23, 2012
Why China Wishes Chen Would Just Go Away , Slate , May 2, 2012
Dictatorship for Dummies , Tunisia Edition, The Washington Post , January 23, 2011
'The Military is above the Nation' , The Washington Post , March 15, 2011
‘Another dictatorship, just with new faces’ for Egypt , The Washington Post , March 16, 2011
‘Worse than our Worst Nightmare during Mubarak,' The Washington Post , March 17, 2011
Where are the dictator’s helpers? The Washington Post , March 18, 2011
One Woman’s Fight to Preserve a Russian Forest , The Washington Post , March 24, 2011
The Opposition Dictators Deserve , The Washington Post , April 16, 2011
Why I am Glad bin Laden Lived to See the Arab Spring , The Washington Post , May 5, 2011
In Venezuela, Fighting for the Chance to Run: ‘He will annihilate that one leader,’ The Washington Post , May 15, 2011
Imagining a World Without Dictators , The Washington Post , August 26, 2011
Why Gaddafi was the quintessential 20th-century dictator , The Washington Post , October 21, 2011
In Russia, Fires—and politicians—are bringing down forests [dead link ] , The Washington Post , August 13, 2010
China’s Jittery Leaders , The New Republic , March 3, 2011
A Victory for Democratic Foreign Policy , The New Republic , May 3, 2011
The Day Nothing Much Changed , Foreign Policy , August 8, 2006
Tunisia’s Lessons for Repressive Regimes , U.S. News & World Report , January 20, 2011
Global Democracy over a Barrel , The Boston Globe , May 14, 2009
Dobson has appeared and provided commentary for various news organizations, including C-SPAN ,[ 15] PBS NewsHour ,[ 16] CNN , CBS , MSNBC , National Public Radio , and Voice of America .
References
^ "William J. Dobson" . ash.harvard.edu . Retrieved July 6, 2023 .
^ a b "Author List" . Lippencot Massie McQuilken. Retrieved May 31, 2012 .
^ "About" . William J. Dobson. Retrieved May 31, 2012 .
^ "Who We Are" . Slate. Retrieved May 31, 2012 .
^ Dobson, William (May 16, 2009). "Saviors and Survivors" . Financial Times . Retrieved May 31, 2012 .
^ The Dictator’s Learning Curve
^ Publishers Weekly , BusinessWeek and Foreign Policy magazine
^ "The Dictator's Learning Curve by William J. Dobson: 9780307477552 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: Books" . PenguinRandomhouse.com . Retrieved July 6, 2023 .
^ Young Global Leader
^ "EAST ASIA ECONOMIC SUMMIT 2003 ASIA AGENDA MONITOR" (PDF) . World Economic Forum. Retrieved May 31, 2012 .
^ "SIF Distinguished Visitors" . Singapore International Foundation. Retrieved June 1, 2012 .
^ "Newsletter" . Salzburg Global Seminar. Retrieved June 1, 2012 .
^ "2010-2011 Events" (PDF) . Middlebury College. Retrieved June 1, 2012 .
^ "Truman Scholarship" . Herald-Journal . August 3, 1994. Retrieved June 1, 2012 .
^ "William J. Dobson | C-SPAN.org" . www.c-span.org . Retrieved July 6, 2023 .
^ "William Dobson on Egypt's 'Quick', 'Dynamic' Process" . PBS NewsHour. Retrieved June 1, 2012 .