Brad Glosserman is deputy director of and a visiting professor at the Center for Rule Making Strategies at Tama University in Tokyo, Japan. He is also senior advisor (nonresident) at the Pacific Forum International, in Honolulu, where he served for 13 years as executive director. He is the author of Peak Japan: The End of Great Ambitions, (Georgetown University Press, 2019) and coauthor, with Scott Synder, of The Japan-South Korea Identity Clash (Columbia University Press, 2015), a study of national identity in Japan and South Korea and its impact on U.S. alliances. He is also editor, with Tae-hyo Kim, of The Future of U.S.-Korea-Japan Relations: Balancing Values and Interests (CSIS, 2004).
His opinion pieces and commentary regularly appear in media around the globe, and he has written dozens of monographs on U.S. foreign policy and Asian security relations. Other articles have appeared in scholarly journals throughout the region, and he has contributed numerous chapters to books on regional security. He is a frequent participant in U.S. State Department visiting lecture programs as well as the US Navy’s Regional Security Education Program, and speaks at conferences, research institutes, and universities around the world. He is a guest lecturer at the Osaka University School of International Public Policy and an adjunct lecturer at the Management Center of Innsbruck (MCI). Prior to joining Pacific Forum, Mr. Glosserman was, for 10 years, a member of The Japan Times editorial board, and he continues to serve as a contributing editor for that newspaper. He is also the English-language editor of the journal of the New Asia Research Institute (NARI) in Seoul.
Mr. Glosserman holds a J.D. from George Washington University, an M.A. from Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), and a B.A. from Reed College.