Experts

Philip B. K. Potter

Fast Facts

Areas Of Expertise

  • Foreign Affairs
  • American Defense and Security
  • War and Terrorism
  • Asia
  • Politics

Philip Potter is the executive director of the National Security Data and Policy Institute, the University of Virginia’s sixth university-level institute. A professor of public policy and the founding director of the Frank Batten School's National Security Policy Center, Potter’s decades of research have focused on U.S. foreign policy, military affairs, data analysis, and international security. He serves as a university expert for the intelligence community and a senior advisor in the Department of Defense. He is an active voice in both academia and government on national security research and policy.

Potter’s latest book with Chen Wang, Zero Tolerance: Repression and Political Violence on China’s New Silk Road, was released by Cambridge University Press in October 2022. Drawing on extensive original data, Potter and Wang demonstrate that China’s harsh policies are driven by deep insecurities about the stability of the regime and its claim to legitimacy. These perceived threats to core interests drive the ferocity of the official response to Uyghur aspirations. The result is harsh repression, sophisticated media control, and selective international military cooperation. The implications of the regional conflict are, however, global.

Potter’s 2015 book with Matthew Baum, War and Democratic Constraint, was named a CHOICE academic title. Potter has published in a wide array of peer-reviewed and popular outlets. He has served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Politics and the Journal of Global Security Studies and is an associate principal investigator for Time-Sharing Experiments in the Social Sciences (TESS). Potter has been a fellow at the Modern War Institute at West Point, Harvard University, and the University of Pennsylvania.

Philip B. K. Potter News Feed

Philip Potter, professor of public policy at the University of Virginia’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy and director of the National Security Data and Policy Institute, said he worries about the current delicate nuclear balance.
Philip Potter UVA Today
The Miller Center’s 2025 William and Carol Stevenson Conference examines how the Trump administration—and future presidencies—might use the levers of economic power.
Alexander Bick, Philip Potter, Scott Miller, and William Antholis Miller Center Presents
“This institute will leverage UVA’s cutting-edge research capabilities to address national security challenges,” said Philip Potter, a professor of politics and public policy and the founding director of the Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy’s National Security Policy Center, who will lead the new institute.
Philip Potter UVA Today
"I think that was a necessity. We had to do something to prevent Ukraine from losing. Because of our own political issues, we put them in a tough spot. They ended up ceding ground because they didn’t have the munitions they needed to hold the lines. The proximity of Russia to Kharkiv means that once you give up that ground, you’re in a lot of trouble. This shift in targeting rules reestablishes a bit of equilibrium," said Potter.
Philip Potter UVA Today
The 2024 Ambassador William C. Battle Symposium on American Diplomacy assesses U.S. deterrence posture in the aftermath of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and in the face of profound technological change.
Admiral Charles A. Richard, Mara Rudman, and Philip Potter Miller Center Presents
In this live webinar discussion convened by UVA’s Miller Center of Public Affairs, experts in history, political science, economics, law, and diplomacy from across the University of Virginia join veteran government practitioners to discuss the array of world crises now challenging American policymakers.
Aynne Kokas, Eric Edelman, Harry Harding, John Owen, Mara Rudman, Phil Potter, Spencer Bakich, Stephen Mull, Syaru Shirley Lin, William Antholis Miller Center Presents