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ASP Senior Fellow to Speak at Panel at American University Tomorrow

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

WASHINGTON, DC – American Security Project (ASP) Senior Fellow Dr. Bernard Finel will join a team of climate change experts tomorrow at the “Climate Exchange” panel discussion at American University in Washington, DC. Dr. Finel will discuss findings from his recent report detailing the security implications of climate change, including how food shortages, scarcity of resources and mass migration will impact the stability of countries and how these changes have already begun to contribute to increases in global conflict and terrorism. The report can be read here at: http://www.secureamericanfuture.org/resources.php.

Prior to joining ASP, Dr. Finel was a professor of military strategy and operations at the U.S. National War College, and he served as Executive Director of the Security Studies Program and Center for Peace and Security Studies at Georgetown University.

WHO:
– Dr. Marcus King, Center for Naval Analyses and Georgetown University
– Dr. Bernard Finel, American Security Project
– Jennifer Bergeson-Lockwood, Population Action International
– Dr. Matthew Nisbet, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University

WHERE:
American University
McDowell Formal Lounge
4400 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20016

WHEN: 4:00pm – 6:30pm

For further information about the panel or about the American Security Project, please contact Selena Shilad at (202) 550-2547 or Amy Pond at (202) 431-9005.

The American Security Project (ASP) is a non-profit, bipartisan public policy research and education initiative dedicated to fostering knowledge and understanding of a range of national security and foreign policy issues. It is organized around the belief that honest public discussion of national security requires an informed citizenry—one that understands the dangers and opportunities of the twenty-first century and the spectrum of available responses. ASP was formed to help Americans—from opinion leaders to the general public—understand how national security issues relate directly to them, and to explain challenges and threats in a way that spurs constructive action.