Experts

Marc Selverstone

Fast Facts

  • Director of presidential studies
  • Co-chair, Presidential Recordings Program
  • Won the Bernath Book Prize for Constructing the Monolith: The United States, Great Britain, and International Communism, 1945-1950.
  • Expertise on John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, the Vietnam War

 

Areas Of Expertise

  • Foreign Affairs
  • American Defense and Security
  • Politics
  • The Presidency

Marc Selverstone is the Gerald L. Baliles Professor of Presidential Studies at the Miller Center, the Center's director of presidential studies, and co-chair of the Center’s Presidential Recordings Program. He earned a BA degree in philosophy from Trinity College (CT), a master’s degree in international affairs from Columbia University, and a PhD in history from Ohio University. 

A historian of the Cold War, Selverstone is the author of Constructing the Monolith: The United States, Great Britain, and International Communism, 1945-1950 (Harvard), which won the Stuart L. Bernath Book Prize from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. His most recent book is The Kennedy Withdrawal: Camelot and the American Commitment to Vietnam (Harvard University Press).

As co-chair of the Presidential Recordings Program, Selverstone edits the secret White House tapes of Presidents John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Richard M. Nixon. He is the general editor of The Presidential Recordings Digital Edition, the primary online portal for transcripts of the tapes, published by the University of Virginia Press.

Selverstone’s broader scholarship focuses on presidents and presidential decision-making, particularly during the 1960s and 1970s. He has written for journals and edited volumes on the Kennedy presidency, the Cold War, and the American war in Vietnam. He also co-edits the Miller Center’s “Studies on the Presidency” series (Virginia) with Miller Center Professor Guian McKee, and is the editor of A Companion to John F. Kennedy (Wiley-Blackwell). 

 

Marc Selverstone News Feed

“We have our current president, whose popularity hasn’t really risen above 50%, and that’s okay, because his idea is really to play to those members of his base,” Selverstone said. “And we have seen something of the same thing going on with Democrats as well, increasingly so over time. For the last two Democratic presidents, Barack Obama, and Joe Biden, there have been a host of partisan policies as well.”
Marc Selverstone 29 News
“We have our current president, whose popularity hasn’t really risen above 50%, and that’s okay, because his idea is really to play to those members of his base,” Selverstone said. “And we have seen something of the same thing going on with Democrats as well, increasingly so over time. For the last two Democratic presidents, Barack Obama, and Joe Biden, there have been a host of partisan policies as well.”
Marc Selverstone 29 News
President Donald Trump’s rebranding of the Department of Defense as the Department of War comes at a time when one of its more notable chiefs has emerged as the subject of a new biography. Robert McNamara, whose command of the military establishment spanned virtually the entire 1960s, is now more fully realized, if not more fully scrutable, in the soon-to-be published "McNamara’s War: A New History."
Marc Selverstone Notes from the Miller Center
The president has a 93% approval rating among GOP voters.
Marc Selverstone Bloomberg
"In most cases, presidents who have received the award have been praised for their commitment to intense personal diplomacy aimed at ending a series of conflicts," says Marc Selverstone, director of Presidential Studies at the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia.
Marc Selverstone L'Espresso
A group of European leaders joined a U.S. president at the White House seeking an end to the war in Ukraine, in a display not seen in decades.
Marc Selverstone NBC News