NTI CEO Christine Wormuth on Opportunities to Strengthen Security Through Cooperation at the Trump-Xi Summit
The Summit can produce outcomes that strengthen U.S. national security and reduce global nuclear and biological risks
NTI is pleased to announce the appointment of Patricia Jaworek as program officer for the Global Nuclear Policy Program, Mary Fulham as communications manager for the Communications team, and Emma Stevens as executive assistant for the Nuclear Materials Security team.
“We are thrilled to have these three skilled women join NTI’s staff, with a special return welcome to Patricia and Mary who each previously served as interns for our Global Nuclear Policy Program,” said NTI Senior Vice President Carmen MacDougall. “Patricia, Mary, and Emma bring valuable experience and dedication to NTI’s mission to reduce global nuclear and biological threats.”
Prior to joining NTI in her new role, Jaworek worked at the NATO Parliamentary Assembly in Brussels and at CRDF Global, where she focused on issues related to NATO deterrence and defense policy and threats from weapons of mass destruction and emerging technologies. Jaworek is a member of the Young Deep Cuts Commission and the Younger Generation Leaders Network on Euro-Atlantic Security.
Fulham returned to NTI after working at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs as a program and communications administrator for the Middle East Initiative. She also worked on a number of political campaigns at the local, state, and national level, including Sen. Ed Markey’s 2020 re-election campaign and Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign.
Stevens brings more than two years of experience as an operations coordinator with the National Community Reinvestment Coalition to her new role at NTI. She previously received her Bachelor of Arts in anthropology and international studies, with a concentration in conflict, peace, and diplomacy and certificate in peace and justice studies from the University of New Mexico.
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The Summit can produce outcomes that strengthen U.S. national security and reduce global nuclear and biological risks
The cycle of military attack and reprisal is once again dangerously in play in the Middle East. It must be broken before escalation, combined with increasingly destructive technology, one day precludes any hope of peace and security for the region.
The Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and NTI are co-chairing a new bipartisan task force comprised of over a dozen former senior government officials and experts with deep national security experience.
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