David Malet is an Assistant Professor at the School of Public Affairs at American University, where his teaching and research include foreign fighters, terrorism, transnational security, US national security policy, the US Congress and elections, and military use of biotechnology. Previously he served as Director of the Security Policy Studies Program at the George Washington University Elliott School of International Affairs. He also taught at the University of Melbourne, Australia, and at Colorado State University-Pueblo, where he was Director of the Center for the Study of Homeland Security. From 2000-2003 he served as Research Assistant on national security issues to US Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle. He also has worked in the office of US Senator John Kerry, the Attorney General of New South Wales, Australia, and the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs.
Experience
2016–present
Associate professor, George Washington University
2012–2016
Senior lecturer, University of Melbourne
2009–2012
Assistant Professor and Director of the Center for the Study of Homeland Security , Colorado State University
2000–2003
Research Assistant, US Senator Tom Daschle
Education
2009
George Washington University, PhD in Political Science
1999
Georgetown University, MA in National Security Studies
1998
Boston University, BA in International Relations and Political Science, BS in Education
Publications
2016
Biotechnology and International Security, Rowman and Littlefield
2015
Bioterrorism and Local Agency Preparedness: Results from an Experimental Study in Risk Communication, Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management
2015
Foreign Fighter Mobilization and Persistence in a Global Context, Terrorism and Political Violence
2015
Captain America in International Relations: The Biotech Revolution in Military Affairs, Defence Studies
2014
Foreign Fighters Playbook, Foreign Affairs
2014
Accountability between the Public and Experts in Times of Risk, Australian Journal of Public Administration
2013
Foreign Fighters, Oxford University Press
2010
In Afghanistan, Less is More, Small Wars Journal
2009
Why Foreign Fighters? Historical Perspectives and Solutions, Orbis
2008
Faith in the System: Conceptualizing Grand Strategy in the Post-9/11 World Order, Studies in Conflict and Terrorism
2007
Trade Vote Determinants: Partisan Effects of Political Action Committee , Social Science Journal
Grants and Contracts
2011
Risk Communication Strategies in Biological Decontamination: Using Social Media to Build Trust