Posted by Kenneth Anderson:
Ken Anderson Signing In
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_05_31-2009_06_06.shtml#1243892081


   My thanks to the Senior Conspirator for the invitation to join the
   Merry Band - I have long been a fan and admirer of the Volokh
   Conspiracy and I am honored to take part.

   Some of the band I have known - Eric Posner, Ilya Somin, several
   others, but I was delighted to meet Eugene and Orin for the first time
   at a lunch in DC two weeks ago. I'm sure many of you have had the
   pleasure of meeting someone in person for the first time whose work
   you have enjoyed on a blog, and are pleased to discover that they are
   as charming in person as on the screen. I look forward to meeting the
   other Conspirators in real life, as too many VC's readers. It is a
   genuine honor to join this group.

   As Eugene said in his introduction, I also post over at the
   international law professor blog [1]Opinio Juris, and I will continue
   to do so. But my interests run more broadly than international law -
   my day job is international business and finance professor, and in my
   pro bono and other work I do nonprofit law, international
   philanthropy, and development finance. So VC, being so broad church in
   its interests, is a great place for me. I also blog on quite
   specialized academic topics related to warfare, terrorism, and such
   things from a theoretical, political science, social science
   perspective at the Complex Terrain Lab ([2]CTLab), but that is on
   quite specialized things.

   I won't ordinarily be so biographical, but perhaps a little bit about
   me in an inaugural post might be helpful.

   ([3]show)

   I am a professor at Washington College of Law, American University,
   DC, where I have been since 1997. Legal academia is something of a
   second career for me - I started life as a tax lawyer with a strong
   interest in human rights and such fields. What's the link? I guess I'd
   say I'm mostly interested in money and violence.

   I grew up in Claremont, California, the second of seven kids of a
   Canadian father who, with my Utah mother, decided not to spend more
   winters in the Lethbridge, Alberta snow. He was a chemist who spent
   his career teaching at Cal Poly Pomona; Claremont was the college town
   then it is today, and as an unsophisticated child of Sarah Palin-type
   intermountain west parentage (betcha and howdy have spontaneously
   passed my lips), it wasn't until I went from undergraduate days at
   UCLA to Harvard Law School that I figured out that all those professor
   fathers wandering around Claremont in tweed jackets in 100 degree heat
   were displaced New Englanders mistaking the place for Amherst.

   Although a many decades drop out, I did a Mormon mission in Peru in
   the 1970s; I occasionally [4]write about Mormons but not too much. I
   was pretty late getting to college, started at age 24 at UCLA, after
   spending a few years in blue collar work - I was a Teamster working
   for Roadway Express the last couple of years before UCLA. I studied
   philosophy, Wittgenstein with Rogers Albritton, ethics with Philippa
   Foot, jurisprudence with Herbert Morris, and political violence with
   David Rapoport.

   I spent a couple of years at Sullivan & Cromwell in New York doing tax
   work, but also doing very extensive work for Human Rights Watch, and
   later went to work for HRW as the director of the arms division, among
   other things the landmines ban campaign. From there I returned to tax
   work, this time on the nonprofit side, as general counsel to George
   Soros's charities - he once introduced me to a large group as "this is
   Ken Anderson, our new counsel - he advises me on catastrophic risks of
   extremely low likelihood." As a description of lawyering, it is so apt
   that I have never let his sometime old-fashioned European social
   democratic tendencies distress me.

   From the Open Society Institute, I went to American University. In
   addition to my appointment there, in DC, I am also a fellow with the
   Hoover Institution and a member of its [5]task force on national
   security and law.

   I have several extensive pro bono commitments, mostly in the
   international development area. I chair the boards of two
   organizations. The Media Development Loan Fund, which is a nonprofit
   private equity fund that provides financing to independent,
   news-providing, reasonably objective newspapers, radios, TV, and
   internet services in the developing world; in that capacity I have an
   active life in both nonprofit governance and tax issues, as well as
   financing, lending especially, and media economics. Having done that
   for now fifteen years, and having watched the organization grow from a
   portfolio of zero to somewhere around $50 million today, I plan to
   leave that very demanding pro bono position in order to focus on
   writing ... and blogging. The other is the [6]Rift Valley Institute US
   branch, which engages in educational and charitable and research
   activities in Sudan and other places of the Rift Valley.

   In general, I am pulling back from the nearly second-career as an
   international nonprofit and development person in order to focus on my
   writing, scholarly and otherwise. I am completing a book on US-UN
   relations, and you can check out [7]my scholarly articles at SSRN. I
   have an active life writing book reviews for the T[8]imes Literary
   Supplement in London, and I serve as the political sciences editor for
   the Madrid [9]Revista de Libros. I have off and on maintained my
   [10]own personal blog, but I will probably let that sit fairly
   inactive, although I will leave it up with its posts on things like
   the laws of war, international law, and other things.

   My favorite writers are Stendhal - and I might revive Sundays with
   Stendhal - Albert Camus, Blaise Cendrars, Rene Char, or anyway
   particular works from these guys. Also the great re-telling of the
   Arthur cycle, Arthur Rex, by Thomas Berger (none of whose other works,
   curiously, can I stand for five minutes). I have always been a fan of
   Heinlein, reflective of my moderately libertarian streak - I would
   describe myself as a non-dogmatic libertarian-mildly-conservative -
   this is what attracted me to the human rights field, but alas I find
   that while I don't seem to have moved very much except on the surface,
   it has gradually moved to a position not so much of "liberal
   internationalism" as ... "multicultural internationalism."

   I am a bad amateur cellist, whose talents don't go much beyond oompah
   continuo parts in simple Baroque music. But I love early Baroque
   string chamber music, including viol da gamba and violin trio Baroque
   music.

   I am married seventeen years, to my Beloved Wife Jean-Marie, quite
   deliberately introduced (set up even) by the great Aryeh Neier, former
   head of the ACLU, HRW, and now president of the Open Society
   Institute; and we have a sixteen year old daughter, who is a proud
   junior member of the NRA even though she has only shot a couple of
   times in her life (bleg on this to follow), and one of two members of
   the Republican Club at Sidwell in DC. I noted that she wore to her
   history final exam today a JAG Corps t-shirt I picked up for her at a
   conference at the JAG school last week.

   At the moment, I am completing the UN-US relations short, short, short
   book I mentioned, and am working on a TLS review essay, for a larger
   project, on what I have been calling 'The Moral Psychology of
   Finance'. I am also working on two other pet projects currently
   getting worked up in book proposal form - proportionality in the law
   and ethics of war, and something I plan to call, Ethics for Robot
   Soldiers.

   I realize this falls into the category of what my students call "too
   much information." But I thought it might be useful if I gave you a
   sense of me as I launch into what an exciting new activity for me. (It
   might also take a little while for me to figure out the formatting on
   VC; please be patient.)
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References

   1. http://opiniojuris.org/
   2. http://www.terraplexic.org/
   3. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1243892081.html
   4. 
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/484tthrj.asp
   5. http://www.hoover.org/taskforces/taskforces/nationalsecurity
   6. http://www.riftvalley.net/
   7. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=235051
   8. http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/the_tls/
   9. http://www.revistadelibros.com/
  10. http://www.revistadelibros.com/
  11. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1243892081.html
  12. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1243892081.html
  13. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1243892081.html

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