Swanee Hunt Explained

Swanee Hunt
Office:United States Ambassador to Austria
Term Start:November 4, 1993
Term End:October 18, 1997
Predecessor:Roy M. Huffington
Successor:Kathryn Walt Hall
President:Bill Clinton
Birth Date:1 May 1950
Party:Democratic Party
Education:Texas Christian University (BA)
Ball State University (MA)
Iliff School of Theology (MA, D.Th.)
Father:H. L. Hunt
Relations:Helen LaKelly Hunt (sister)
June Hunt (sister)
Ray Lee (brother)[1]
Spouse:Charles Ansbacher
Children:Three
Occupation:Diplomat, professor

Swanee Grace Hunt (born May 1, 1950) is an American writer, academic, and former diplomat.

Hunt is a lecturer in public policy at Harvard Kennedy School and was the founding director of the Women and Public Policy Program[2] at the Kennedy School.[3] [4] From 1993 to 1997, she served as United States Ambassador to Austria. She is a recipient of the PEN/New England Award for non-fiction.

Early life

Hunt was born May 1, 1950, in Dallas, Texas, the youngest of four children born to the oil tycoon H.L. Hunt and Ruth Ray. However, not until her father's first wife died did Swanee Hunt's parents marry in 1957 and it was only then that she and her siblings moved into the Hunt mansion, built to resemble its namesake, Mount Vernon.[5]

Hunt grew up in Dallas, Texas, where she attended the Hockaday School.[6] She lived for many years in Denver, Colorado, where she was active in many community and philanthropic activities. Her several siblings include sisters Helen LaKelly Hunt and June Hunt.

Education

While Hunt had hoped to attend college in the east, her ultra-conservative father refused, so Hunt began college in her hometown at Southern Methodist University. Hunt earned her BA in philosophy from Texas Christian University, an MA in psychology from Ball State University, and an MA in religion and a doctorate in theology from Iliff School of Theology.[7]

Career

Hunt was appointed in 1993 as ambassador to Austria, where she was notable for writing a weekly newspaper column and radio program.[8]

In 1997, Hunt helped establish the Women and Public Policy Program at Harvard Kennedy School. Since stepping down as Director of the Program in 2008, she has continued on at the Kennedy School as the Eleanor Roosevelt Lecturer in Public Policy.

Personal life

At age 20, Hunt married Mark Meeks, a seminary student. Hunt gave birth to daughter Lillian in 1982, and the marriage dissolved soon after.

In 1985, Hunt married conductor Charles Ansbacher, who died on September 12, 2010. She has three children, among them filmmaker Henry Ansbacher, and three grandchildren.

Books

Her book This Was Not Our War: Bosnian Women Reclaiming the Peace won the 2005 PEN/New England Award for non-fiction[9] and includes a foreword by former president Bill Clinton.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Stanley H. Brown, H. L. Hunt (Chicago: Playboy, 1976) 192–193.
  2. Web site: Women and Public Policy Program (WAPPP).
  3. Web site: Swanee Hunt. Harvard Kennedy. School. August 3, 2016.
  4. Web site: Ambassador Swanee Hunt - Inclusive Security.
  5. Web site: Collection: Swanee Hunt papers Smith College Finding Aids. 2020-06-29. findingaids.smith.edu.
  6. Book: Hunt, Swanee. Half-Life of a Zealot. registration. October 4, 2006. Duke University Press. 9780822338758. August 3, 2016. Internet Archive.
  7. Web site: Ambassador Swanee Hunt's CV. July 11, 2017.
  8. Web site: Milestones. 2020-06-29. Swanee Hunt.
  9. Web site: News Release - John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum . August 3, 2016.