Francis Fukuyama and "The End of History and The L Ast Man": Gabriel Elias
Francis Fukuyama and "The End of History and The L Ast Man": Gabriel Elias
Francis Fukuyama and "The End of History and The L Ast Man": Gabriel Elias
Gabriel Elias
Biography
Yoshiro Francis Fukuyama
was born in Chicago on the
October 12, 1952.
Japanese descendant but
with little contact with
Japanese culture.
Moved to New York as a
child, and in 1967 moved to
Pennsylvania.
Biography
Makes his Bachelor in Classics at Cornell University. There,
he joins Telluride Association.
Pursued Graduate studies in comparative literature at Yale.
Came to Paris to study for one semester, where he took
classes from Roland Barthes and Jacques Derrida. There,
becomes disillusioned with his studies.
Goes back to the US to study Political Sciences at Harvard,
earning his Ph.D. for his thesis on Soviet threats to intervene
in the Middle East.
In 1974 joins RAND Corporation.
Biography
From 1981 to 1982 he was a regular member of the Policy
Planning Staff of the US Department of State specializing in
Middle East affairs. In 1989 returns as Deputy Director for
European political-military affairs and leaves in 1990 to finish
writing his main book The end of History and the Last Man.
Taught Public Policy at George Mason University from 96 to
2000.
From then until 2010 taught International Political Economy
at John Hopkins University.
Now is a Senior Fellow in the Center on Democracy,
Development and the Rule of Law at Stanford.
Biography
Dr. Fukuyama is chairman of the editorial board of a new
magazine, The American Interest, which he helped to found in
2005. He holds honorary doctorates from Connecticut College,
Doane College, Doshisha University (Japan), and Kansai
University (Japan). He is a member of the Board of Trustees of the
Rand Corporation, member of the Board of Governors of the
Pardee Rand Graduate School, and member of the advisory
boards for the Journal of Democracy, the Inter-American Dialogue,
and The New America Foundation. He is a member of the
American Political Science Association and the Council on Foreign
Relations. He is married and has three children.
Formerly classified himself as a neoconservative. However, he has
turned away from the movement since the invasion of Iraq by
George W. Bushs government, even publishing an article against
it.
Relation with
Neoconservatism
Endorses the following principles, which are identified in
Foreign Policy as neoconservative, and even identified
himself as one.
The USA should care about the internal character of states
it should formulate a foreign policy that reflects the values of
liberal democratic societies.
That it should sometimes use military power as a legitimate
vehicle to pursue these goals.
skepticism about social engineering.
Turned away from the movement since the invasion of Iraq
by George W. Bushs government, even publishing an article
against it, arguing that the movement had dropped the
skepticism about social engineering and was trying to do
State-Building.
The end of History and the
Last Man
The book was written after an article published in 1989
called the end of history?. in the international affairs
journal The National Interest.