Reports & Papers

4 Items

Paper

Lawyers as Professionals and as Citizens: Key Roles and Responsibilities in the 21st Century

| November 2014

We seek to define and give content to four ethical responsibilities that we believe are of signal importance to lawyers in their fundamental roles as expert technicians, wise counselors, and effective leaders: responsibilities to their clients and stakeholders; responsibilities to the legal system; responsibilities to their institutions; and responsibilities to society at large.

Report - Managing the Atom Project, Belfer Center

Advancing Nuclear Security: Evaluating Progress and Setting New Goals

In the lead-up to the nuclear security summit, Advancing Nuclear Security: Evaluating Progress and Setting New Goals outlines what was accomplished in a four-year effort launched in 2009 to secure nuclear material around the globe—and what remains to be done. The effort made significant progress, but some weapons-usable nuclear materials still remain “dangerously vulnerable." The authors highlight the continuing danger of nuclear and radiological terrorism and call for urgent action.

Delay barriers at the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration's Y‐12 facility

NNSA Production Office

Discussion Paper - Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School

Defining and Implementing Best Practices in Nuclear Security

| Dec. 14, 2012

This paper analyzes the contribution that best practices can make to the field of nuclear security by doing the following:

  • Defining what is meant by best practice
  • Specifying a methodology for deriving it
  • Understanding the resulting characteristics of the method
  • Comparing its pros and cons to other methods contributing to security, such as guidelines and regulations

Michèle Flournoy during a Harvard Kennedy School JFK Jr. Forum on the Middle East. Nicholas Burns moderated the October forum.

Tom Fitzsimmons

Paper - Boston Consulting Group

The First 100 Days in Government

November 2012

Belfer Center Senior Fellow Michèle Flournoy, former under secretary of defense for policy, and Margaret Spellings, former secretary of education, provide advice for new government appointees who will soon begin their new positions in public service.  "Getting off to a strong start in your first 100 days is crucial," they write, noting that it "can make or break your success in office."