Senior Fellow at Brown University and Son of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev
Areas of
Interest: The former Soviet Union's
transition from a centralized to a
decentralized society, as well as its
transformation from a central to a market
economy and its international security
during this transition; the creation of a
criminal society in Russia resulting from
the mistakes in the early stages of market
reformation; the history of the Cold War and
the turning points in relations between the
US and the Soviet Union in the Khrushchev,
Eisenhower, and Kennedy periods; and the
history of Soviet missiles and space
development, in which he played an active
role, from 1958-1968.
Sergei N.
Khrushchev, son of former Soviet Prime
Minister Nikita Khrushchev, has been a
senior fellow at the Watson Institute since
1996 and a senior visiting scholar from
1991-1996. Before that, he was a fellow at
the Institute of Politics at Harvard
University's John F. Kennedy School of
Government. From 1968-1991, he served at
the Control Computer Institute in Moscow,
rising from section head to first deputy
director in charge of research; and from
1958-1968, he was an engineer, then deputy
section head in charge of guidance systems
for missile and space design, including work
on cruise missiles for submarines, military
and research spacecraft, moon vehicles, and
the “Proton,” the world’s largest space
booster.
He earned his Soviet doctoral degree from the Ukrainian Academy of Science, a PhD from the Moscow Technical University, and an MA with distinction from the Moscow Electric Power Institute. In addition to teaching courses at Brown University, he lectures at the Naval War College in Newport, He is a regular commentator for the U.S. media and the author of more than 250 books and articles on engineering, computer science, history, and economy. HIs books include Khrushchev on Khrushchev (1990), Nikita Khrushchev: Crisis and Missiles (1994), The Political Economy of Russian Fragmentation (1993), Three Circles of Russian Market Reforms (1995), and Nikita Khrushchev and the Creation of a Super Power (2000). His books have been published worldwide in 12 languages. He is currently working on his new book, Nikita Khrushchev’s Reforms. In 1967, he began to help his father, Nikita Khrushchev, work on his memoirs. The full text of the memoirs, The Time, the People, the Power, was published as four volumes in Russian 1999 by Moscow News. He is now editing the memoirs in English as a joint project of Watson Institute and Pennsylvania State University. The first volume, Commissar, was published in January 2005. He is mentioned in the Who’s Who in the World, Who’s Who in the United States, International Who’s Who of Contemporary Achievements, International Authors and Writers, International Who’s Who of Intellectuals, and Contemporary Authors Gala Research. In the Soviet Union, he received the Lenin Prize for his research, the Prize of the Council of Ministers of the U.S.S.R., Hammer and Sickle Gold Star and title “Hero of Socialist Labor,” several awards for achievements in space and computer research, and four awards from the Soviet Union Engineering Society. He is a member of the International Academy of Information (1993), the Russian Space Academy (1994), the Russian Society of Informatics (1990), the Russian Engineering Society (1970), and a member of Vladimir Chelomey’s scientific and Engineering Society (2003). |
