Condoleezza
Rice is the Chief Foreign Policy Adviser to the 43rd President of the United States,
George W. Bush.Condoleezza Rice is also the
Thomas and Barbara Stephenson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. She previously
served as a Hoover senior fellow from 1991 until 1993, when she was appointed provost of
Stanford University. Rice held the position of provost for six years, during which time
she served as the chief academic and budget officer of the university, before stepping
down on July 1, 1999 for a leave of absence.
Rice first came to Stanford in 1981 as a fellow in the arms
control and disarmament program. She is a tenured professor in the university's political
science department and was a Hoover Institution national fellow from 1985 until 1986.
Following her initial Hoover Institution affiliation, Rice
went to Washington, D.C. to work on nuclear strategic planning at the Joint Chiefs of
Staff as part of a Council on Foreign Relations fellowship. She came back to Stanford when
the fellowship ended.
Rice returned to Washington in 1989 when she was director
of Soviet and East European affairs with the National Security Council. She also was
appointed special assistant to the president for national security affairs and senior
director for Soviet affairs at the National Security Council under President George Bush.
In those roles, she helped bring democratic reforms to Poland, and played a vital role in
crafting many of the Bush administration's policies with the former Soviet Union.
Rice's professional activities have not been limited to the
Stanford University. She cofounded the Center for a New Generation, an after-school
academy in East Palo Alto, California, and is a (former) corporate board member for
Chevron, the Hewlett Foundation, and Charles Schwab. In addition, Rice is a member of J.P.
Morgan's international advisory council.
Rice is a Council of Foreign Relations member, a National
Endowment for the Humanities trustee, and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences.
She has written numerous articles and several books on
international relations and foreign affairs, including Germany Unified and Europe
Transformed: A Study in Statecraft, with Philip Zelikow (Harvard University Press, 1995).
Rice enrolled at the University of Denver at the age of 15,
graduating at 19 with a bachelor's degree in political science (cum laude). She earned a
master's degree at the University of Notre Dame and a doctorate from the University of
Denver's Graduate School of International Studies. Both of her advanced degrees are also
in political science.
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