The George Washington University Cold War Group
Summer Institute on Conducting Archival Research
June 4-5, 2003
All sessions held at 1957 E. Street, N.W., Lindner Commons, 602
June 4
8:30-9Breakfast
Voesar Conference Room, Room 412Q
9:00-9:20 Introductions
9:20-10:30 Preparing to visit an archive
Distribution of National Security Archive “How To” CD-ROM
Thomas Blanton, William Burr
Room 308
10:30-10:45 Break
10:45-12:00 At the archives: Procedures for gettingwhat you want
Part 1 - The National Archives
Room 212
12:00-1:15 Lunch talk on the State Department’s FRUS series
David Geyer
Voesar Conference Room, Room 412Q
1:20-2:30 How Archivists Think
Trudy Peterson
Room 212
2:40-3:30 Understanding where documents come from, how they come to be written, and the
policymaker’s perspective
James Goldgeier, Hope Harrison
Room 212
3:30-3:45 Break
3:45-5:30 At the archives: Part 2, Foreign archives
Hope Harrison, James Hershberg
Room 212
6:30 Dinner discussion
The Cold War International History Project
Christian Ostermann, James Hershberg
Lindner Family Commons, Room 602
June 5
8:30-9:00 Breakfast
All activities today will take place in
Lindner Family Commons, Room 602
9:00-12:00 Hands on: your chance to read and interpret documents and engage in a debate about
them. We will distribute documents on several issues from various countries and discuss questions of interpretation.
Hope Harrison, Thomas Blanton,
Malcolm Byrne, James Hershberg
12:00-2:00 Lunch talk
A Policymaker’s Perspective
Dennis Ross
2:00-2:45 Going beyond the archives: FOIA requests and private papers.
Peter Kornbluh, Gregg Brazinsky
2:45-3:30 Going beyond the archives:conducting interviews.
James Goldgeier, Thomas Blanton,
Hope Harrison
3:30-4:00 Concluding Discussion
GWCW gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the Elliott School Dean.
Speakers
Thomas S. Blanton, Director, National Security Archive (NSA), The George Washington University (GWU)
Expert on issues concerning accessibility of government documents and on the Cold War.
Gregg Brazinsky, Assistant Professor of History and International Affairs, GWU
Specialist on South Korea
William Burr, Senior Analyst, National Security Archive, GWU Specialist on U.S. foreign policy
Malcolm Byrne, Deputy Director and Director of Research, the National Security Archive Specialist on U.S., Iran and Central Europe
David C. Geyer, Office of the Historian, Department of State Compiler of FRUS volumes on Germany and Europe
James M. Goldgeier, Director of the Institute for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies, and Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, GWU Specialist on U.S.-European-Russian relations
Hope M. Harrison, Assistant Professor of History and International Affairs, GWU Specialist on Russia and Germany
James G. Hershberg, Associate Professor of History and International Affairs, GWU Specialist on U.S. foreign policy and the Cold War, former director of the Cold War International History Project
Peter Kornbluh, Senior Analyst, National Security Archive, GWU Specialist on U.S. relations with Cuba, Nicaragua and Chile
Christian Ostermann, Director, Cold War International History Project, the Woodrow Wilson Center
Specialist on U.S., Germany and the Cold War
Trudy Peterson, Visiting Research Fellow, the World Bank, and former Director of the National Archives
Specialist on international archival issues
Dennis B. Ross, Director and Ziegler Distinguished Fellow, Washington Institute for Near East Policy
Formerly Director of Policy Planning and Special Middle East Coordinator, U.S. Department of State