Jump to content

Jean de Ruyt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jean De Ruyt

Ambassador Jean De Ruyt (born 14 September 1947) retired from the Belgian diplomatic service in March 2012 after some 40 years. Now an independent consultant and political analyst Jean De Ruyt currently consults for Covington & Burling LLP as Senior Advisor[1] and for other consulting firms for EU affairs and security issues. He is a member of the Belgian Royal Academy and co-chair of the Europe-Asia Center.

Career

[edit]

Ambassador Jean De Ruyt was the Permanent Representative of Belgium to the European Union until September 2011. He was then appointed to advise the European Union's High Representative / Vice-President Catherine Ashton on specific foreign policy issues. He was previously Ambassador to Italy, covering also, from Rome, the FAO (UN Food and Agricultural Organization), Albania and the Republic of San Marino. From April 2001 until August 2004 he was the Permanent Representative of Belgium to the United Nations in New York. In this capacity and as the Representative of the European Union Presidency in 2001, he contributed actively in the UN reaction to the events of 11 September 2001.[2]

His first diplomatic postings were in Kinshasa, Algiers and the Industrial Development Office in New York. He served from 1982 until 1987 in the Permanent Representation of Belgium to the EU as the assistant to the Ambassador (Antici). In 1987, he was appointed deputy Chief of Mission in the Belgian Embassy in Washington where he served until mid-1991.

During the 1990s, his diplomatic career allowed him to participate closely in the shaping of the new European Security Architecture emerging after the end of the cold war. First as Senior official to the CSCE and Ambassador to the Western European Union (WEU), then as Ambassador to Poland (1994–1996), Permanent Representative to the NATO Council (1996–1997) and Belgian Member of the Political Committee of the European Union (1997–2001).

De Ruyt has a doctorate from Louvain University Law School (1969) and studied at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. He was Assistant Professor in Public Law at Louvain University before entering the Diplomatic career. Since his return to Brussels in 2007, he is a regular visiting professor at Louvain University (UCL) and in the College of Europe in Poland (Natolin). He has conducted seminars on European issues for the joint European Studies Institute of Louvain and St Louis Universities and sits on the Board of The Royal Institute for International Relations, the Egmont Institute

Published works

[edit]

His publications include L 'Acte Unique Européen Editions de l’Université de Bruxelles 1987,[3][4] second Edition 1989; European Political Cooperation towards a European Foreign Policy, Atlantic Council of the U.S., 1989; A Minister for a European Foreign Policy,[5] Schuman Centre, European University Institute, Florence, 2005 and various articles on European institutions and defence policy. 'Leadership in the European Union' was published by Louvain University Press. His latest book, ‘Le Privilege du Diplomate’, reflections on 40 years of diplomatic career, has just[when?] been published by Les Presses Universitaires de Louvain.

Personal life

[edit]

Jean De Ruyt was born in Louvain, Belgium on 14 September 1947. He is married to Sheila Arora and has five children: Carole, Isabelle, Virginie, Laurent and Amber.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Lipton, Eric; Hakim, Danny (19 October 2013). "Lobbying Bonanza as Firms Try to Influence European Union". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-04-02.
  2. ^ [1][dead link]
  3. ^ Andrew Moravcsik. "Negotiating the Single European Act : national interests and conventional statecraft in the European Community" (PDF). Princeton.edu. Retrieved 2015-04-02.
  4. ^ Jean de Ruyt (1989). L' Acte unique européen. Openlibrary.org. ISBN 978-2-8004-0962-7. OL 1955870M. Retrieved 2015-04-02.
  5. ^ "Policy Papers : Jean de Ruyt : A Minister for a European Foreign Policy" (PDF). Cadmus.iue.it. Retrieved 2015-04-02.[permanent dead link]
[edit]