Markos Kounalakis
Markos Kounalakis is a visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. He is also a senior fellow at the Center for Media and Communication Studies at the Central European University in Budapest, Hungary. President and publisher emeritus of the Washington Monthly, he is currently at work on a research project on the geopolitics of global news networks.
Kounalakis is a print and network broadcast journalist and author who covered wars and revolutions, both civil and technological.
He reported the overthrow of communism for Newsweek in East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria and the outbreak of ethnic strife and war in Yugoslavia. He was based in Rome and Vienna and later ran the magazine’s Prague satellite bureau for more than a year.
After Newsweek, he worked as the NBC Radio and Mutual News Moscow correspondent, covering the fall of the Soviet Union as well as the war in Afghanistan. Kounalakis has written for the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times Magazine, the International Herald-Tribune, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Dallas Morning News, and many other regional and international newspapers and magazines. He is currently a guest foreign policy columnist for the Sacramento Bee and McClatchy-Tribune News.
He has written three books, Defying Gravity: The Making of Newton (Beyond Words Publishing, 1993), Beyond Spin: The Power of Strategic Corporate Journalism (coauthor, Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1999), and Hope is a Tattered Flag: Voices of Reason and Change for the Post-Bush Era (PoliPointPress, 2008).
He was born to Greek refugees in San Francisco in 1956 and received a public education, including his undergraduate years at University of California, Berkeley (1978, political science). He received his MSc in journalism from Columbia University (1988), was a Robert Bosch Foundation Fellow in Europe (1988-89), studying at both the Bundesakademie für öffentliche Verwaltung in Bonn, Germany, and the École Nationale d'Administration in Paris. He was an international journalism graduate fellow at the University of Southern California (1995-96) and El Colegio de Mexico in Mexico City. He did his doctoral work in political science (international relations) at Central European University, with the conferral of his PhD expected in 2015.
In the academic world, he serves on the Board of Councilors at the University of Southern California’s (USC) Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism; and the Board of Advisers at USC’s Center on Public Diplomacy. He was a former member of the Board of Advisors at Georgetown College; a former member of the Wilson Council at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (WWICS) a; former member of the Board of Directors at the Center for National Policy; and former vice chairman of the Board of Advisers for the Southeast Europe Project at WWICS.
He formerly served as chairman of Internews Network (2002-4); vice chairman of the California State World Trade Commission (2001-3); member of the Board of Trustees of the Western Policy Center (2001-5); member of the Board of Trustees and Executive Committee of the World Affairs Council of Northern California (2006-8); and member of the National Governing Board of Common Cause (2006-8). In June 2003, he chaired a multinational reconstruction conference in Athens, Greece, at which Iraq’s media laws were drafted.
He is married to the former US ambassador to the Republic of Hungary, Eleni Tsakopoulos Kounalakis.