Name Diane Kunz | ||
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Diane Bernstein Kunz (born November 9, 1952 in Queens, New York) is an American author, historian, and lawyer from Durham, North Carolina, and executive director of a not-for-profit adoption advocacy group, the Center for Adoption Policy. She is the author of Butter and Guns (1997), an overview of America's Cold War economic diplomacy.
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She gained a bachelor's degree from Barnard College and a Law degree from Cornell University. She was a corporate lawyer from 1976 to 1983, then took an M.Litt in diplomatic and economic history at Oxford University. She received her PhD from Yale University in 1989, and went on to teach diplomatic history at Yale. In a 1997 essay, she argued that "John F. Kennedy was a mediocre president. Had he obtained a second term, federal civil rights policy during the 1960s would have been substantially less productive and US actions in Vietnam no different from what actually occurred. His tragic assassination was not a tragedy for the course of American history." In 1996 and 1998 she was twice declined tenure at Yale, to the surprise of her students and colleagues. She taught at Columbia University from 1998–2001, and was a research scholar at New York Law School from 2004–2005, where she has organised annual conferences on adoption policy. She founded the Center for Adoption Policy with Ann N. Reese in 2001, and practices adoption law with Rumbold & Seidelman.
Personal life
She has four sons with her husband, whom she married in 1974, and they have four adopted children from China.