Job opening: Director, Security and Foreign Affairs
Salary: $147 500 - 184 500 per year
Published at: Sep 30 2024
Employment Type: Full-time
Under the direction of the Executive Director, the position is responsible for leading, managing, and developing a small team of 5-6 policy research staff (analysts, fellows, and research assistants), specifically overseeing the unclassified work in Security and Foreign Affairs subject matter areas. Also contributes to the broader staff as one of the directors providing cross-functional coordination and leadership across the Commission staff.
Duties
Lead and manage a diverse team developing policy-relevant analysis within the Commission's mandate. Lead the team's efforts to: generate ideas; research and draft the Commission's Annual Report; prepare staff papers and issue briefs; develop hearings; draft talking points and editorials, etc.
Develop and mentor junior and mid-career policy analysts to build subject matter expertise and produce substantive and effective written and oral assessments of issues in the team's portfolio.
Collaborate with the Economics and Trade Team to ensure research in support of the Commission's mandate is comprehensive and coordinated across all relevant issue areas.
Ensure the team's analytic work is accurate, timely, and well written; satisfies the requirements of Commissioners and Congress; reflect the Commission's positions; is relevant to Congressional policy-making; and meets professional standards.
Serve as a subject matter expert for Commissioners, to Congressional staff, and in support of the Commission's advice to Congress, in the subject matter areas assigned to your team (see areas of expertise identified in the requirements and qualifications listed below).
Develop and sustain a professional network with officials in the U.S. government who create or carry out China-related strategy, policy, or plans; and China analysts in the U.S. government, private sector, and academia.
Requirements
- Applicants must be eligible for a security clearance.
- Upon appointment, the selectee will be required to undergo a background investigation, and during the employment period may also be required to obtain and hold a Federal security clearance.
- An active clearance is not a prerequisite for applying for or initiating employment.
Qualifications
REQUIREMENTS AND QUALIFICATIONS
An established record of policy-relevant professional experience on issues related to Chinese national security and foreign affairs.
Experience supervising and leading people and teams in conducting research and analysis.
Strong and demonstrated ability to present information clearly and concisely through both written and oral communication.
Advanced research, analytical, and evaluative skills, including the ability to mentor and develop in analysts the skills necessary to synthesize and analyze large amounts of disparate data on emerging and/or controversial issues and clearly communicate their implications to a policy audience.
Expert knowledge of five or more of the following areas:
China's foreign policy and global diplomatic activities;
China's domestic politics and policy-making;
China's military strategy and the organization, capabilities, and activities of the People's Liberation Army (PLA);
China's development of technologies for defense applications, the defense research and development (R&D) ecosystem, and military-civil fusion initiatives;
China's internal security policies and apparatus, to include CCP inspection and discipline organs, the Ministry of State Security (MSS), the Ministry of Public Security (MPS), the People's Armed Police (PAP), and the judicial, Pro curatorial, and penal systems;
China's policies and activities relating the transnational security challenges, including drug flows, cybersecurity, nonproliferation, public health, information control, transnational repression, and others;
China's relations with Taiwan;
China's policy toward Hong Kong; and U.S. foreign policy related to China and the Indo-Pacific (including U.S. alliances and other partnerships in the region) and U.S. military strategy, capabilities, and activities in the Indo-Pacific.
HIGHLY DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
(Not required, but may be considered in the selection process)
Professional proficiency in Mandarin Chinese, to include ability to effectively utilize original language sources of electronic and print information, and guide the use of such resources by other analysts, in developing policy-relevant original research and analysis.
Experience working in or engaging with Congress on matters related to national security and foreign affairs policy.
Experience living and/or working in China, Taiwan, or Hong Kong, or in a U.S. government department or agency that conducted or oversaw national security and foreign affairs policy with China.
Academic degree(s) in a relevant field, such as Asian Studies, International Relations, Political Science, Security Studies, or Asian History.
Education
Bachelor's degree or higher.
Contacts
- Address US-China Economic and Security Review Commission
444 North Capitol Street, NW
Suite 602
Washington, DC 20001
US
- Name: Human Resources
- Phone: 202-624-1407
- Email: [email protected]
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