Steven L. Schooner, JD Biography |
Title: |
Associate Professor of Law at George Washington University Law School |
Position: |
None Found to the question "Should the US Have Attacked Iraq?" |
Reasoning: |
No position found as of June 28, 2007
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Theoretical Expertise Ranking: |
Experts Individuals with PhD's, JD's, or equivalent advanced degrees in fields relevant to the US - Iraq conflict. Also top-level government officials (such as foreign leaders, US presidents, Founding Fathers, Supreme Court Justices, members of legislative bodies, cabinet members, military leaders, etc.) with positions relevant to the US - Iraq conflict. |
Involvement and Affiliations: |
Associate Professor of Law, George Washington University Law School Co-Director, Government Procurement Law Program, Law School Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, George Washington University Law School Fellow, National Contract Management Association Certified Professional Contracts Manager (CPCM) Faculty Adviser, Public Contract Law Journal, American Bar Association Member, Procurement Round Table Member, Editorial Board, Public Procurement Law Review, UK Member, Advisory Board, Government Contractor Former Associate Administrator for Procurement Law and Legislation, Office of Federal Procurement Policy (OFPP), Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Former Trial and Appellate Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Department of Justice Former Active Duty Army Judge Advocate Former Commissioner, Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals Former Adjunct Professor, Contract and Fiscal Law Department, Judge Advocate General's School of the Army |
Education: |
JD, College of William and Mary LLM, with highest honors, George Washington University BA, Rice University |
Other: |
Congressional testimony with the US Senate Democratic Policy Committee in a hearing titled "Iraq Contracting: Predictable Lessons Learned," Sep. 10, 2004
Congressional testimony with the US Senate Democratic Policy Committee in a hearing titled "Contracting in Iraq," Nov. 3, 2003
"A Modest Proposal to Enhance Civil/Military Integration: Rethinking the Renegotiation Regime as a Regulatory Mechanism To Decriminalize Cost, Pricing, and Profit Policy," paper presented at the 1999 Defense Systems Management College (DSMC) Acquisition Research Symposium, June 21-23, 1999 |
Quoted in: |
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