March 8, 2011 —Indiana University’s David Fidler, an internationally recognized expert on global health and arms control, presented about global health’s rise and fall as a foreign policy subject.
This lecture was co-hosted by the USC Institute for Global Health and USC Gould School of Law.
David Fidler
James Louis Calamaras Professor of Law & Director, Indiana University Center on American and Global Security
Indiana University School of Law, Bloomington
David P. Fidler is the James Louis Calamaras Professor of Law at Indiana University School of Law, Bloomington, and is the inaugural Director of the Indiana University Center on American and Global Security. He is an internationally recognized expert on global health (including bioterrorism and biosecurity) and arms control and non-proliferation issues (especially chemical, biological, and “non-lethal” weapons).
His latest book is Biosecurity in the Global Age: Biological Weapons, Public Health, and the Rule of Law (Stanford University Press, 2008)(with Lawrence O. Gostin). At Indiana University, Fidler regularly teaches International Law, International Trade, and National and Homeland Security Law. He also teaches a seminar on Counterinsurgency and Rule of Law Operations. He holds degrees from the University of Kansas, Harvard Law School, and the University of Oxford.
Lecture
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