Deputy Director

Dr. Andrew Reddie is the Deputy Director of the Berkeley APEC Study Center an Assistant Professor of Practice at the University of California, Berkeley’s School of Information and senior engineer at Sandia National Laboratories where he works on projects related to cybersecurity, nuclear weapons policy, wargaming, and emerging military technologies. Andrew is currently a Bridging the Gap New Era fellow, Hans J. Morgenthau fellow at Notre Dame University, a non-resident fellow at the Brute Krulak Center at Marine Corps University, research director at the Center for Long-Term Cybersecurity, and deputy director at the Berkeley APEC Study Center. Previously, Andrew served as deputy director of the Nuclear Policy Working Group, predoctoral researcher at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s Center for Global Security Research, and as an associate at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, DC.
His work has appeared in Science, the Journal of Cyber Policy, and the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists among other outlets and has been variously supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, MacArthur Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Nuclear Science and Security Consortium.
» E-Mail: areddie@berkeley.edu
Publications
- New Economic Statecraft: Industrial Policy in an Era of Strategic Competition
- The Nuclear Network: Multiplex Network Analysis for Interconnected Systems
- Regulators Join Tech Rivalry with National-Security Blocks on Cross-Border Investment
- Applying Wargames to Real-World Policies
- Next-Generation Wargames
- Comparative Industrial Policy and Cybersecurity: a Framework for Analysis
- Comparative Industrial Policy and Cybersecurity: the US Case
- All Hands on Deck: Advancing Safeguards for Naval Nuclear Materials
- Article Review 140 on “Dangerous Confidence? Chinese Views on Nuclear Escalation.”
- Hypersonic Missiles: Why the New “Arms Race” is Going Nowhere Fast
- Under The Nuclear Shadow: Situational Awareness Technology and Crisis Decisionmaking
- The US Needs an Industrial Policy for Cybersecurity
- Wargames as Experiments: The Project on Nuclear Gaming’s SIGNAL framework
- Cyber Industrial Policy in an Era of Strategic Competition
- Reflections on INF Withdrawal
- Design Matters: The Past, Present and Future of the INF Treaty
- Why the Security of Nuclear Materials Should be Focus of US-Russia Nuclear Relations
- Hypersonic Hysteria: Examining the Hypersonic Hammer