J Alexander Thier
Senior Rule of Law Advisor, Rule of Law Program
Governance | Political Systems and International Relations | Peacekeeping | Post-Conflict Activities | Rule of Law | Middle East | South Asia
Phone: (202) 429-4702
E-mail: athier@usip.org
Languages: Persian (Dari), German
J Alexander Thier joined the Institute as senior adviser in the Rule of Law program, one of the Centers of Innovation, in 2005. He is director of the project on constitution making, peacebuilding, and national reconciliation, director of the Future of Afghanistan Project, and an expert group lead on the Genocide Prevention Task Force. Thier also co-founded the International Network to Promote the Rule of Law while at USIP. He is also responsible for several rule-of-law programs in Afghanistan, including a project on establishing relations between Afghanistan’s formal and informal justice systems. Thier was a member of the Afghanistan Study Group, which issued its report in January 2008, and is a member of the Pakistan Policy Working Group (report forthcoming).
Thier was the director of the Project on Failed States at Stanford University’s Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law. From 2002 to 2004, Thier was legal adviser to Afghanistan’s Constitutional and Judicial Reform Commissions in Kabul, where he assisted in the development of a new constitution and judicial system.
Thier has worked as a senior analyst for the International Crisis Group, as a legal and constitutional expert to the British Department for International Development, and as an adviser to the Constitutional Commission of Southern Sudan. Thier worked as a UN and non-governmental organization official in Afghanistan from 1993 to 1996, where he was the officer-in-charge of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance to Afghanistan in Kabul. He also served as coordination officer for the UN Iraq Program in New York. An attorney, Thier was a Skadden fellow and a graduate fellow at the U.S. National Security Council’s Directorate for Near-East and South Asia. He received the Richard S. Goldsmith award for outstanding work on dispute resolution from Stanford University in 2000.
He has a B.A. from Brown University, a master’s in law and diplomacy from the Fletcher School at Tufts University, and a J.D. from Stanford Law School.
Publications:
- The Status of Constitutional Interpretation in Afghanistan
(PDF - 153KB)
- A Toxic Cocktail: Pakistan's Growing Instability
USIPeace Briefing, February 2008
- Bridging Modernity and Tradition: Rule of Law and Search for Justice in Afghanistan
USIPeace Briefing, October 2007
- Constitutional Reform in Iraq: Improving Prospects, Political Decisions Needed
USIPeace Briefing, September 2007
- Hearts and Minds: Afghan Opinion on the Taliban, the Government and the International Forces
USIPeace Briefing, August 2007
- "The Making of a Constitution in Afghanistan," New York Law School Law Review, Volume 51:3 (2007).
- "Path to Peace, Justice in Afghanistan," with Scott Worden, Christian Science Monitor, (March 13, 2007).
- Troubles on the Pakistan-Afghanistan Border
USIPeace Briefing, December 2006
- "Order in the Courts," The New York Times, (August 28, 2006).
- "The Crescent and the Gavel," The New York Times, (March 26, 2006).
- "Afghanistan," in Twenty-First-Century Peace Operations, edited by William Durch and Paul Stares (USIP Press, forthcoming).
- "If the Afghans Can…," Los Angeles Times, (August 14, 2005).
- "Rush to Failure in Iraq," The New York Times, (July 14, 2005).
- "Writing Iraq’s Constitution: A Chance to Change History," San Francisco Chronicle, (February 25, 2005).
- "Great Debates," Hoover Digest, (January 2005, Vol. 1).
- "Reestablishing the Judicial System in Afghanistan," Lichtenstein Institute for Self-Determination, (Princeton University Working Paper, July 2004).
- "The Road Ahead: Political and Institutional Reconstruction in Afghanistan" in Reconstructing War-Torn Societies: Afghanistan, Sultan Barakat, ed. (Third World Quarterly Series, Palgrave, 2004).
- "A Chance of Success Slips Away?," The New York Times, (September 23, 2004).
- "The Politics of Peacebuilding," Nation-Building Unraveled: Aid, Peace, and Justice in Afghanistan, edited by Antonio Donini et al. (Kumarian, 2003).
Congressional Testimonies:
Available on usip.org:
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