PROFILE FOR CHARLES F. HERMANN
President
George H.W. Bush selected Texas A&M
University as the site for his Presidential Library. As part
of the Library complex, the University established the George Bush School of Government and
Public Service, which admitted its first students in September
1997.
Charles (Chuck) Hermann was hired in July 1995 as the founding Director
of the new school. Prior to the School’s opening, Prof. Hermann was
involved in establishing the Bush School's first masters degree program
(Public Service and
Administration), recruiting a faculty, selecting a first class, and
providing oversight for the School’s new Center for Presidential
Studies and Center for Public Leadership Studies. He
also led a successful $20 million development campaign for the
School.
After
the Bush School became a separate unit within the University in
September 1999 and Robert Gates (former head of the CIA) was brought in
as the first Dean of the Bush School, Hermann became the Bush
School's Associate Dean for Academic Programs and developed the
school's second masters degree program (International Affairs). During
these years, Hermann held the Brent Scowcroft
Chair of
International Policy Studies.
Dr.
Hermann holds a PhD from Northwestern University and a BA degree from DePauw University in political science. After graduating from
Northwestern, he taught at Princeton University. In 1969 and 1970, Hermann served on the National Security
Council staff under Henry Kissinger. From
1970-1995, Prof. Hermann was a
professor in the Political Science department at Ohio State University. He served as director of Ohio State University's Mershon
Center,
a research center dedicated to national security and foreign policy
issues, from 1980-1995, and as Ohio State's acting vice provost for international
affairs. During 1991-1992, Hermann was a Fellow in the
Pew Case Program of the Kennedy School at Harvard University.
Prof. Hermann's expertise is
in U.S. and comparative foreign policy, crisis
management, and decision
making. At Texas A&M and at Ohio State, he taught graduate courses
in U.S. foreign policy and comparative foreign policy. He
also taught
use of the case method at the Summer Institute of Political Psychology
at Ohio State.
In 2002, Prof. Hermann received the Bush
School Faculty Achievement Award. In 2001, he was honored with the International Studies Association's
Foreign Policy Distinguished Senior Scholar Award. In 2000, the
graduating class of Bush School
students
voted him the Silver Star Award for most valuable faculty
member.
Dr. Hermann was also honored
by his selection as an
Honorary Pallbearer at the 6 December 2018 funeral of former
President George H.W. Bush. Upon his retirement from Texas A&M
in August 2019, Dr.
Hermann was awarded the status of Professor Emeritus by Texas
A&M
Unversity.
Two of Dr. Hermann's most recent books
are Called
to Serve: The Bush School of Government and Public Service
(a 20 year history of the Bush School, co-authored with Sally Dee Wade)
and When Things Go Wrong: Foreign Policy
Decision Making under Adverse Feedback. Other books include
the American Defense Annual
and New Directions in Foreign Policy
(co-edited with James Rosenau and Charles Kegley).
Hermann is also the author or co-author of dozens of articles and book chapters on a
wide range of issues related to foreign policy and international
affair, appearing in such journals and publications as American
Political Science Review, International Encyclopedia of the Social
Science, International Studies Quarterly and the Encyclopedia
of Foreign Relations. He has also published articles on Soviet
decisionmaking (American Political Science Review), hostage
taking and presidential stress
(in Reich, Origins of
Terrorism) and sources of change in foreign policy (International
Studies Quarterly).
Dr. Hermann has many years of
professional service at the local, national and international levels.
He was president of the International
Studies Association in
1989-1990. He has been a long-time member of the Council on Foreign Relations (New York) and the International Institute of Strategic
Studies (London). He also completed a term on the
Council of the Inter-University
Consortium for Political and Social Research
-- an international cooperative of universities for the collection and
dissemination of social science data.
Dr. Hermann has
also been
involved in community volunteer activities for many years. He
was president of OPAS (Opera and
Performing Arts Society) at Texas A&M. In 2003-2004, he was program chair for the Bryan Rotary Club,
and club president in 2004-2005. In 2005, he was one of the
distinguished citizen honorees of the Brazos Valley African-American
National Heritage Society. He
serves on the board, and has been president for two terms, of the Brazos Valley Symphony Society. He has
also been a long-time member of the board of Project Unity.
On his
retirement, Dr.
Hermann and his wife Dr. Lorraine Eden Hermann decided to give
back to
the University by establishing the Lorraine
and Charles Hermann Endowed Excellence Fellowship (Hermann Fellows)
program in the Bush School.
The Fellowship is designed to provide financial support
to second-year
Bush School students who have demonstrated exceptional academic and
leadership skills during the first year of their two-year degree
program but had not received a large scholarship at the time they
were
admitted to the School. The first award (to a student in the Masters in
International Affairs program) was given in May 2020, and now each year
two students in the Master's in International Afffairs program are
selected by Bush School faculty to be Hermann Fellows. Individuals who
would like to contribute to the Fellows program are invited to make
tax-deductible gifts through the Texas A&M Foundation (Account
458539).
Last updated March 2024