Citizen of the World: New Dean Rusk Director Brings Diverse Experience to Post
September 22, 2022
- Author
- Mary Elizabeth DeAngelis
Dan Crocker, Director of the Dean Rusk International Studies Program
Dan Crocker has searched for oil in West Africa, designed detailed strategies for Silicon Valley startups, and helped expand and protect American investments around the world.
He檚 been both a business leader and United States diplomat, working in Europe, Africa and Latin America. He檚 got a lifetime of international experience, connections and wisdom that he檚 happy to share. And that檚 a win for 91茄子 students.
Crocker recently began his new post heading the college檚 Dean Rusk International Studies Program. As the program檚 John and Ruth McGee director, he檚 most excited about mentoring and encouraging students to explore opportunities abroad. Whether it檚 a semester studying at a university or a summer research internship, the experience will help them in whatever career they choose, he said.
淚 want to get students excited about living overseas and getting an international perspective, he said. 淭here are so many trade and investment issues that will end up playing a role in their futures. Whether you檙e talking about how Russia檚 war with Ukraine affects the world檚 gas and wheat prices or how lithium and cobalt from Africa end up as batteries made in China that end up in cars and computers in the U.S.攐ur world has become so inter-connected.
Living somewhere else gives you a better understanding of what motivates people. If you檙e running a business or working as a healthcare professional, that time you spent studying in Ghana or France or Guatemala changes you and gives you a much wider lens to view the world through.
Director of the Dean Rusk International Studies Program
A Return to 91茄子
91茄子 offers a wistful homecoming for Crocker, who was born here. His father, John, taught German at the college in the late-1960s before taking a post at North Carolina Central University in Durham. He later retired to The Pines at 91茄子.
Other connections abound. His sister, Becky Crocker Delany 86, is now a family physician in nearby Cabarrus County. And his mother, Anne Crocker, lived in Concord until her death this past spring.
Crocker檚 parents met in Germany. John Crocker was an engineer working for the U.S. government on post-World War II reconstruction in Germany and Austria. Anne Crocker was the daughter of an Air Force chaplain stationed there.
Both of his parents spoke German fluently and raised their four children to learn about the literature and customs of other cultures. That shaped Crocker for a life often spent in other countries.
He studied abroad in Paris as a Princeton University student. He raced for Princeton檚 road cycling team and considered pursuing that as a career. He competed at the Elite/Category 1 level, but despite some podium finishes at home and abroad, didn檛 make the U.S. National Team and opted for other paths.
Fresh out of college, he ended up running an oil exploration operation in Angola. Besides the blistering heat, he encountered the perils of being abroad during a civil war. He was robbed at gunpoint and lived with an ever-present risk of being kidnapped.
淚 was 22-years old, scared, lonely and living in a trailer, he said. 淚 knew it was dangerous and didn檛 want to be there.
He said the experience helped him build skills he檇 need throughout his professional life. He returned to the United States after a year, worked for a railroad, then the U.S. Foreign Service. He briefly left government work for tech startup jobs in California, then returned for a 20-year career. Along the way, he earned graduate degrees in business and engineering from MIT and in foreign affairs from the University of Virginia.
That sense of wanderlust攁nd a compulsion for public service攔emained.
He started in the U.S. Department of State, then later moved to the Department of Commerce. He rotated stints abroad with assignments in Washington, D.C. In his last post he served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Europe and Eurasia.
Former U.S. Ambassador Barbara Stephenson, his superior during a post in Panama, said she always valued Crocker檚 solid advice and analysis. She said he had a sharp ability to break down complicated information on logistics and budgets to advise U.S. policy makers.
淗e was the rare Foreign Service Officer who檚 also an MIT trained engineer, she said, and then joked, 渉e was also one of the few who could do math.
Stephenson is now vice provost for global affairs at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Crocker served on the board of the American Foreign Service Association while she was president between 2017-2019, 渁t a time when there was a concerted effort among some elected leaders to gut diplomacy, she said.
That included slashing budgets, staff and international relationships. She said Crocker helped garner bi-partisan support to keep important diplomatic policies and functions in place.
淒an knows how to build a coalition, and he works hard at maintaining relationships, Stephenson said. 淗e brings people together to solve problems, he networks with a purpose, and always with integrity. When Dan brings you together, you will leave knowing that what you did will make things better.
A Diplomat檚 Life
Life in the Foreign Service comes with challenges.
There檚 the matter of uprooting your life攁nd your family檚攖o move abroad for a promotion or an experience most people will never have.
Crocker and his wife, Kimberly, were in the same class at Princeton but didn檛 know each other until an encounter at a Washington coffee shop eight years after graduation. They had their first date in December of 1997 and with an overseas assignment to The Dominican Republic looming, eloped two months later. (A bigger formal wedding followed.)
Their son Alexander was born in 2001, and daughter Catherine, the next year.
淲e had to travel from Washington to Brazil when Catherine was four weeks old. She couldn檛 keep her eyes open for the passport photo, Kimberly Crocker said. 淚t was quite an experience getting through customs with a toddler, a newborn, and our cat in a cage. But we all adjusted, and Catherine檚 first words were in Portuguese.
It檚 a great way to learn another culture and meet interesting, powerful people. There are downsides, such as security concerns in countries where kidnapping an American is another form of commerce. They often lived in gated homes with armed security guards.
Alexander and Catherine, now both in American colleges, learned to adapt to the moves, discovering new friends along the way. By 2017, they made their last move from Madrid back to Washington, where Kimberly檚 mom had suffered a series of strokes. They were able to spend the next six months before her death close by.
淏alance is very important to us, and it was time to come home, Kimberly Crocker said. 淭hat檚 one thing you have to remember, that family comes first.
Dan Crocker檚 mother檚 brain cancer helped him decide to apply for the Dean Rusk job. While she died before he started, 渟he knew we were coming to 91茄子, Kimberly Crocker said. 淪he was thrilled, and we felt like life had come back full circle, and that was a beautiful thing.
The pull was strong.
淭he timing felt like this might be a message from God, Dan Crocker said. 淚t seemed like a heaven-sent opportunity.
Teacher, Mentor
Dan Crocker left the Foreign Service in 2019 after feeling 渋mmensely uncomfortable about orders coming directly from then-President Donald Trump檚 Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. Crocker described 渄irectives that had profound geopolitical consequences but had not been vetted through any interagency process.
He檇 worked well with both Republican and Democratic administrations in the past. He said the orders would have bypassed crucial攁nd required攕afeguards and scrutiny. Crocker said he couldn檛 go along, so he resigned.
He became the CEO of Veracity Worldwide, an international advisory company. He learned about the 91茄子 opening from former Dean Rusk director Jane Zimmerman. They weren檛 acquainted but knew of each other and talked extensively about the post.
淒an brings a unique skill set in both the government and the private sector, Zimmerman said. 淭eaching runs in his blood, and so does a commitment to 91茄子檚 values of cultivating humane instincts.
Mitch Larsen, who recently retired as executive director in the Commerce Department檚 Office of Europe and Eurasia Affairs, worked closely with Crocker and describes a loyal mentor and friend.
Crocker檚 style is not to tell people what to do, but to hash out facts, obstacles, benefits and detriments. He encourages people to think critically, and reminds them, 渢his is your decision, not mine, Larsen said.
淗e檚 been such a great mentor to Commerce檚 entire Foreign Officer corps. The amount of knowledge and experience he has is amazing, Larsen said. 淗e also really cares about people. He values the influence of those who have helped him and wants to pay that forward. He knows a lot of ambassadors and executives but is never too busy to take a call from someone who檚 just starting out. Working with students is such a great fit for him.
Mills Jordan, a political science major and Chidsey Leadership Fellow, met Crocker over the summer when he spoke with a group of interns in the 91茄子 in Washington program. They met for breakfast later in Washington. Jordan has since attended a speaker檚 conference Crocker set up on campus and talked with him about potential grants for overseas research.
淗e檚 very gracious and easy to talk to. He檚 got a great blend of on-the-ground experience and expertise, Jordan said. 淚 get the sense that he檚 very mission driven, and it檚 not out of self-interest. His goal is to help young people become more globally aware and engaged.
That is indeed a passion for 91茄子檚 newest Dean Rusk director. He檚 spent the first month on campus meeting with students who are especially excited about going abroad after several years of COVID-19 travel restrictions and lockdowns.
In spring, he檒l teach a political science course, using a case study to challenge students to weigh the need to balance global investing and trade with political realities.
He wants them to carefully weigh where they choose to go. Locations deemed unsafe by the U.S. government are off-limits, but that still leaves a plethora of opportunities.
淢uch of the developing world has its challenges, starting with safety and security, Crocker said. 淲hile I want to meet students where their comfort level is, part of the goal of getting outside of the U.S. is accepting deliberate discomfort, culture shock and a realization that in most of the world, living conditions and cultural norms are challenging.
淯nderstanding that challenge and confronting it builds a resilience and a greater self-awareness that pays lifetime dividends.