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Sherri Goodman is an American security executive and lawyer. She is a Senior Fellow at the Polar Institute and the Environmental Change & Security Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center, and Senior Strategist at the Center for Climate and Security. She is the Secretary General of the International Military Council on Climate & Security. Previously, she served as the President and CEO of the Consortium for Ocean Leadership. She is the author of "Threat Multiplier: Climate, Military Leadership & the Fight for Global Security", published by Island Press in 2024.
General
Goodman served as Senior Vice President and General Counsel of CNA where she was also the founder and Executive Director of the CNA Military Advisory Board, whose landmark reports include National Security and the Threat of Climate Change (2007), and National Security and the Accelerating Risks of Climate Change (2014), The Role of Water Stress in Instability and Conflict (2017), and Advanced Energy and US National Security (2017) among others.[1] She appeared as herself in the 2010 film Carbon Nation, and Jared P. Scott's 2016 film The Age of Consequences in which Goodman is featured, is based on the work of the CNA Military Advisory Board.[2][3]
Goodman served as the first Deputy Undersecretary of Defense (Environmental Security) from 1993 to 2001.[1] As the chief environmental, safety, and occupational health officer for the Department of Defense (DoD), she oversaw an annual budget of over $5 billion. She established the first environmental, safety and health performance metrics for the Department and, as the nation's largest energy user, led its energy, environmental and natural resource conservation programs. Overseeing the President's plan for revitalizing base closure communities, she ensured that 80% of base closure property became available for transfer and reuse. She developed and led the Arctic Military Environmental Cooperation Program which removed hazardous liquid waste streams from decommissioned Russian nuclear submarines in the 1990s.
In early October 1997, Goodman supported protecting "military readiness" in the Kyoto Protocol through an exemption for military operations. The Kyoto Protocol did not enter into force due to the Byrd-Hagel Resolution. Goodman also developed DOD's first climate change and clean energy strategy, to accompany the military's efforts to understand climate risks and ensure military readiness in the energy transition.
Goodman serves on the boards of the Atlantic Council, the EXIM Bank's Climate Council, the Joint Ocean Commission Leadership Council, the Marshall Legacy Institute, Sandia National Laboratory's Energy and Homeland Security External Advisory Board, the Secretary of State's International Security Advisory Board, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI). She is a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations, served on its Arctic Task Force in 2016 and on the Board of its Center for Preventative Action.
Previously, she served on the Boards of Blue Star Families, the Committee on Conscience of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the National Academy of Sciences' Boards on Energy and Environmental Systems (BEES) and Environmental Systems and Toxicology (BEST), the Advisory Board to the US Global Change Research Program, and the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR).
She has also served on the Responsibility to Protect Working Group co-chaired by former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.
Goodman has testified before numerous committees of the U.S. Congress, and conducted interviews with published in major print, television, radio and online media. She has been an Adjunct Lecturer in International Affairs and Security at the Harvard Kennedy School and an Adjunct Research Fellow at the Kennedy School's Belfer Center for Science and International AffairsCenter for Science and International Affairs. She has been an Advisor to Virginia Tech and the University of Chicago for curriculum on environmental security and lectures at universities and other organizations around the world.
Goodman received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Environmental Peacebuilding Association in 2024.
Personal
Born in New York City, Sherri Lynn Wasserman is the daughter of George (February 20, 1931 – February 19, 2015; b. Cologne, Germany) and Renate Wasserman, Holocaustrefugees who arrived in New York in the 1930s.[6][4][8] Her father, a Korean WarArmyveteran, received an MBA from Columbia University and worked for thirty years as an organizational consultant for IBM, and her mother worked for an art consulting service, Windmueller Fine Arts, in Scarsdale, New York.[4][8] Sherri and John Goodman have three children.[9][8]