Duncan Wood

Biography:

Duncan Wood, Ph.D., CEO of Hurst International Consulting, is a passionate advocate for smart policy, inclusive dialogue, & evidence-based solutions. Prior to Hurst International, he was President of the Pacific Council on International Policy and Vice President for Strategy and New Initiatives at the Wilson Center, where he worked on supply chain policy, critical minerals, electric vehicles and on the geopolitics of the energy transition. From 2013-2020, he was Director of the Wilson Center’s Mexico Institute. Wood is an internationally renowned specialist on supply chain policy, the geopolitics of critical minerals, Mexican politics and US-Mexican ties. He regularly gives testimony to the US Congress and is a widely quoted media source, who has published extensively on a wide range of global issues.  He is the author or editor of 12 books and more than 30 chapters and articles. He is a board member of Transparency International, Signos Vitales (a Mexican public policy research organization) and Foreign Affairs Latinoamerica, and is an editorial advisor to El Universal newspaper. Over the past decade he has served as co-chair of the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Council on Transparency and Anti-Corruption, has worked closely with the WEF on energy policy. From 1996-2012, he was a professor and the director of the International Relations Program at the Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico (ITAM) in Mexico City. Over the course of his career, he has been a Fulbright Fellow and a Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS); an editorial advisor to Reforma newspaper; Technical Secretary of the Red Mexicana de Energia; a consultant with McLarty Associates, the Economist Intelligence Unit, Horizon and Eurasia Group; and owner of a speakeasy in Mexico City. He studied in the UK and Canada, receiving his Doctorate in Political Studies from Queen’s University, Canada, is a life-long fan of Liverpool Football Club and will hopefully Never Walk Alone.

Trumping Hegemonic Stability Theory

by Issue: July/August 2025

Why the emergence of a transactional, power-maximizing United States and reorientation of U.S. trade policy marks the end of America’s postwar stabilizer role

Championing North America’s potential

by Issue: May / June 2014

The tilt towards Asia that has long been heralded in the foreign policy of the United States of America carries with…