Michael Lekson

Director of Gaming, Academy for International Conflict Management and Peacebuilding

lekson_300.jpg

Contact

Phone: (202) 429-4149

E-mail: mlekson@usip.org

Languages: Spanish

Michael Lekson is director of gaming for the Academy for International Conflict Management and Peacebuilding. He joined the Institute’s Professional Training program in 2003 as a program officer. He came to the Institute following a 26-year career in the Department of State, where he was deputy assistant secretary of state for arms control, overseeing all multilateral arms control negotiations and treaty implementation, for which he received the secretary’s Distinguished Service Award. Prior to that, Lekson was deputy to the special representative of the president and the secretary of state for implementation of the Dayton Peace Accords. Lekson was also director of the Office of European Security and Political Affairs, where he helped develop and implement policies to adapt NATO to the post-Cold War world, and of the Office of United Kingdom, Benelux, and Ireland Affairs, where he worked intensively on the Northern Ireland peace process.

During his Foreign Service career, Lekson served as a consular officer in Bilbao, Spain, and as a political officer in U.S. embassies in Costa Rica, Peru, and the United Kingdom. He was deputy U.S. representative to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe during the OSCE’s augmentation of its democracy building, conflict prevention, and conflict management efforts in formerly communist countries, especially in the Balkans and Central Asia. Prior to joining the Department of State, he served two years in the U.S. Army as a field artillery officer.

Lekson has a B.A. in English from Princeton University and a master’s in linguistics from Stanford University.

Publications:

Publications & Tools

(USIP)
January 2012 | News Feature by Michael Lekson

The Polish government makes use of USIP training to help key figures from Afghanistan and Tunisia lead their own countries’ transitions.

October 2011 | News Feature by Gordon Lubold

Adm. James Stavridis, NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe, spoke with USIP staff about some of USIP’s programs making a difference in conflict zones

(Courtesy: Bill Fitz-Patrick)
October 2011

The Institute’s Academy for International Conflict Management and Peacebuilding held the course in nuclear nonproliferation Sept. 26-30. And, for the first time ever, an undersecretary of state, Ellen Tauscher, spoke to an Academy class. Tauscher is the undersecretary of state for Arms Control and International Security Affairs.

May 2011 | News Feature by Gordon Lubold

If military folks play war games, then peace builders play peace games. But SENSE, or Strategic Economic Needs and Security Exercise simulation training, creates a world of make-believe in which only pragmatic decision-making actually pays off.

April 2010

At the Nuclear Security Summit on April 12 and 13, leaders from around the world pledged to take their own steps to secure nuclear material used in bombs, civilian nuclear reactors and power plants, and to work together to enhance overall security.

Events

October 26, 2010

Sports have been used as a way to build trust, teamwork and social cohesion from the international to the neighborhood level for thousands of years.  Scholars and advocates alike assert that it can also serve to improve security, reintegrate traumatized populations, break down stereotypes and reconcile torn societies and groups in the context of violent conflict. On October 26, 2010, USIP held a symposium Tuesday addressing the impact of sports and peacebuilding.