Michael A.G. Michaud
Author of over one hundred published works,
Michael A.G.
Michaud was a U.S. Foreign Service officer for 32 years before
turning full time
to writing.
During his diplomatic career, he served as
Acting Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for Science and Technology, Director of the
State Department’s Office of Advanced Technology, Minister-Counselor for
Environment, Science, and Technology at the American Embassy in Tokyo,
and as Counselor for Environment, Science, and Technology at the
American Embassy in Paris. His earlier overseas assignments were
Consul-General in Belfast, Information Officer in Bombay, Political and
later Economic Officer in Tehran, and Vice-Consul in Dacca. In
Washington, he served as country officer for Iran, Australia and Papua
New Guinea, and the United Kingdom. He also worked in the Bureaus of
Political-Military Affairs, Intelligence and Research, and Personnel.
Michael led the successful negotiation of a new science and
technology agreement between the United States and Poland, and of a new
transportation science and technology agreement between the U.S. and the
Soviet Union. He played a major role in the negotiation of a new space
cooperation agreement between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. He was one
of the initiators of U.S.-Soviet anti-satellite arms control
negotiations and served on the U.S. delegation. He represented the
Department of State many times in interagency space policy forums and
testified before Congressional committees four times on space-related
issues.
He is a member of many professional organizations,
including the International Academy of Astronautics, the American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, the American Astronautical
Society, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
He has spoken before meetings of all these organizations, as well as at
the annual meetings of the International Astronautical Federation.
He also is a member of the World History Association.
Michael is the author of two research-driven books. His
most recent titled
Contact with Alien Civilizations: Our Hopes and Fears about
Encountering
Extraterrestrials, published in 2007 by the scientific
publisher Springer, is
a detailed study of the centuries-long debates about the probability and
consequences of coming into contact with an extraterrestrial
civilization. He previously published a study of the American pro-space
movement titled
Reaching for the High Frontier: The American Pro-Space Movement,
1972–84. His publication record also includes more than eighty
articles and papers, three short pieces of fiction, and the novel
Legend released
under a pseudonym.
His papers include It’s About
the Evidence,
Quotations to Consider in the Debate About Active SETI,
An International Agreement Concerning the Detection of
Extraterrestrial
Intelligence,
A Reply from Earth?,
Contact with
Alien Civilizations:
Our Hopes and Fears about Encountering
Extraterrestrials,
Ten Decisions that Could Shake the World,
SETI and Diplomacy, and
The Last Question.
He also coedited the book
Social Implications of the Detection of Extraterrestrial
Civilization:
A Report of the Workshops on the Cultural Aspects of SETI.