Mark Gasiorowski

Mark Gasiorowski (born October 9, 1954)[1] is a political scientist and author who works at Louisiana State University in the field of Middle East politics, Third World politics, and U.S. foreign policy. He holds a joint appointment in Louisiana State University's International Studies Program. He has been a Visiting Fellow at St. Antony's College, Oxford University and a Visiting Professor at Tehran University. He has served frequently as a consultant to the United States Department of State. In 2003, he testified before the 9-11 Commission (aka the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States).[2][3] Journalist and academic Stephen Kinzer has called him "the most persistent" of "a small but dedicated group of scholars [who] have devoted considerable effort to uncovering the truth about events surrounding the 1953 coup" in Iran,[4] an event so important (Kinzer believes) it "defined all of subsequent Iranian history and reshaped the world in ways that only now becoming clear."[5]

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Education

He earned his B.A. in Mathematics at the University of Chicago, June, 1976, his M.A. in Political Science at the University of North Carolina, May 1980 and his doctorate in Political Science also at the University of North Carolina, August 1984.[1][6]

Works

Books

Contributions

References