George Hubbard Blakeslee

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George Hubbard Blakeslee (August 27, 1871 - May 5, 1954) was an academic, professor at Clark University and the founder of the Journal of Race Development, which despite its name suggestive of eugenics was, in fact, the first American journal devoted to international relations. [1] This journal was later renamed the Journal of International Relations, which in turn was merged with Foreign Affairs.

Born in Geneseo, New York, he was the brother of the botanist Albert Francis Blakeslee. George Blakeslee registered at the University of Leipzig in Germany in April 1902.

Blakeslee participated in a number of international bodies: the Washington Disarmament Conference of 1921, the Lytton Commission of 1931-32, and in 1942 led the Far Eastern Unit that was a subcommittee of the Advisory Committee on Post-War Foreign Policy at the State Department. This unit, though its designation changed several times before the US occupation of Japan, led to the post-World War II Far East Commission on which he served.

He died at Worcester, Massachusetts in 1954.

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