The German Marshall Fund of the United States (GMF) is a nonpartisan organization that advances the transatlantic partnership to meet the challenges and opportunities of the 21st century. With headquarters in Washington, DC; offices in Berlin, Brussels, Paris, Warsaw, Belgrade, Bucharest, and Ankara; representations in London and Madrid; and more than 140 experts and fellows worldwide, GMF is a hub for policy innovation, convening, and leadership development. GMF's work focuses on three priorities: strengthening transatlantic security, advancing economic and technological competitiveness, and adapting to a shifting global landscape. The Transatlantic Security Pillar leverages GMF's analytical expertise and convening power to improve European and transatlantic resilience, security, and deterrence and defense. The pillar identifies emerging risks, delivers actionable policy recommendations, and forecasts future developments while providing a confidential space for key stakeholders to exchange ideas. The pillar's program priorities include defending Europe, building Europe's security order, securing allied interests in the Arctic, and positioning allies to counter hybrid threats. Within this broader security framework, the Democracy and Security Network focuses specifically on how healthy civil military relations support good governance and effective security policy in the US and Europe. The pillar executes its work consistent with GMF's vision and goals and in collaboration with colleagues throughout GMF. Within the Transatlantic Security pillar, the Democracy and Security Network focuses on the role of the military in facilitating democratic backsliding in the United States and Europe. It specifically identifies how illiberal leaders politicize the military and abuse power to erode democratic checks and balances and outlines the implications of that politicization for transatlantic security. DSN uses rigorous non-partisan research and analysis to inform and influence leaders across critical communities, including government, media, legal, civil society, and military. DSN aims to prevent and/or mitigate the politicization of the military and abuse of power over the military in transatlantic countries at risk of democratic backsliding, with a particular emphasis on the United States. DSN is seeking a research analyst to conduct research and analysis at the intersection of democratic backsliding and the military. This position is responsible for analyzing how would-be authoritarian leaders use the military to facilitate democratic backsliding, with a particular emphasis on developments in the transatlantic relationship. The position is further responsible for providing timely research on civil-military relations in the context of democratic backsliding. The position requires strong qualitative and quantitative research skills, including the ability to work with survey/public opinion data, complex data sets, text scraping and other data derived from LLMs, and to parse and analyze large amounts of information quickly. The analyst should have extensive knowledge of civil-military relations theory and be familiar with military practices and culture. The position requires the analyst to work both independently and across a team in pursuit of a research agenda that the analyst will develop in coordination with DSN’s Senior Fellow. The analyst will have excellent writing, communication, and organizational skills, and the flexibility and willingness to prioritize competing demands while producing high quality work on tight deadlines. The goal will be to make the Democracy and Security Network a go-to resource for timely and quality research and analysis on civil-military relations and democratic backsliding within and outside governments across the Atlantic.
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Mid Level