Douglas Farah
Douglas Farah is an American journalist, author and national security consultant. Farah served as United Press International bureau chief in El Salvador from 1985 to 1987, and a freelance journalist for ''The Washington Post'', ''Newsweek'', and other publications until being hired as a staff correspondent for ''The Washington Post'' in 1992. While working for the ''Post'', Farah served as bureau chief of Central American and the Caribbean until 1997, international investigative reporter between 1998 and 2000, and of West Africa between 2000 and 2003. He left the ''Post'' in 2004, and has since authored two books and served as a contributor to peer reviewed publications such as the ''Journal of International Affairs'' and analysis pieces for ''Foreign Policy'' and the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 1 - 15 results of 15 for search 'Farah, Douglas', query time: 0.24s
Refine Results
-
1by Farah, Douglas
Published 2004Call Number: Loading...Publisher description
Located:Loading...
Book -
2by Farah, Douglas
Published 2007Call Number: Loading...Table of contents only
Located:Loading...
Book -
3by Farah, Douglas
Published 2012Call Number: Loading...Get full text
Located:Loading...
Government Document eBook -
4
-
5
-
6
-
7
-
8
-
9
-
10
-
11
-
12
-
13Call Number: Loading...
Located:Loading...Book Loading... -
14by Shultz, Richard H., 1947-Other Authors: “...Farah, Douglas...”
Published 2004
Call Number: Loading...Get full text
Located:Loading...
Government Document eBook -
15by Shultz, Richard H., 1947-Other Authors: “...Farah, Douglas...”
Published 2004
Call Number: Loading...
Located:Loading...Book Loading...
Search Tools:
RSS Feed
–
Email Search
Related Subjects
Foreign relations
Strategic aspects
Terrorism
Politics and government
Security, International
Insurgency
Economic conditions
National security
Organized crime
Social aspects
Social conditions
Transnational crime
Authoritarianism
Criminals
Cryptocurrencies
Diamond industry and trade
Diamond mines and mining
Disinformation
Economic aspects
Finance
Gangs
Gold smuggling
Illegal arms transfers
Influence
Information warfare
International crimes
Internet and international relations
Islam
Mass media
Military policy