John F. Hicks (1949- )

February 11, 2015 
/ Contributed By: Charles L. Chavis

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Ambassador John Hicks

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John F. Hicks is a diplomat and global educator who served as a United States Ambassador to the United Nations (UN). A native of Goldsboro, North Carolina, Hicks was born in 1949. Hicks holds a bachelor’s degree in Political Science from Morehouse College, a diploma and master’s degree from Johns Hopkins University in Bologna, Italy and Washington, D.C.

His career in international relations and diplomacy began in 1973 when he joined the United Internship Program with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). This service propelled him through the ranks where he served in senior leadership positions in Ethiopia, Liberia, Malawi, Zambia, and the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt. In 1989, Hicks was awarded the Agency’s Senior Foreign Service Presidential Meritorious Service Award.

Hicks received his first presidential appointment in 1993 as the Assistant Administrator for USAID’s Africa Bureau. In this capacity Hicks was responsible for distributing aid in addition to strategically managing United States humanitarian and economic development programs on behalf of Sub-Saharan Africa. Towards the end of his tenure with USAID, he became a member the Senior Foreign Service and was promoted to the rank of Career Minister.

In 1996 President Bill Clinton announced Hicks’s second appointment, as Ambassador to Eritrea.  By 1997, Federal investigator Jacquelyn L. Williams-Bridgers had begun investigating Hicks on accusations of sexual misconduct. In September of 1997 Hicks resigned after a report by Williams-Bridgers concluded that he had engaged in sexual misconduct. Hicks was accused of sexual harassment against two secretaries in the U.S. Embassy in Asmara, the capital of Eritrea. The women claimed he engaged in inappropriate physical contact and created a hostile work environment for them.

Originally, Hicks denied these accusations and prepared to defend himself in the upcoming hearings.  He decided, however, to resign to spare his family embarrassment, and instead to pursue a career in the United States. During his brief term as the second U.S. Ambassador to Eritrea, he represented President Clinton and promoted United States commercial, political, and military interest.

In 1998 Hicks joined Georgia State University as Associate Provost for International Affairs. He also served in a variety of advisory positions and as a board member for several private and public organizations including the Council of Foreign Affairs, the Georgia State Universities Center for International Business Education and Research (CIBER), and ProSidian Consulting, an Atlanta consulting firm. He also sits on the board of the International University of Grand-Bassam Foundation which supports the work of the International University of Grand-Bassam in Côte d’Ivoire, West Africa.

About the Author

Author Profile

Charles L. Chavis Jr. is a 2012 graduate of The University of North Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG). He graduated Cum Laude with disciplinary honors in the area of African American and Diaspora Studies. While attending UNCG, Chavis served as of the African American and Diaspora Studies Program Ambassador. Charles is a charter member of the Ankh Maat Wedjau Honor Society of the National Council of Black Studies and graduated Cum Laude from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro with a Degree in African American Studies and History.

In 2011 he published “Yared (Saint, 505–571 AD),” on the sixth century Ethiopian pioneer of musical notation, in BlackPast.org. In August of 2012 he published “Strange Fruit in the Age of Obama” in Dr. Frank Naurice Woods’ text Rooted in the Soul. Earlier that year Charles was honored and awarded the distinguished Brandon Honors Scholar award by Vanderbilt University Divinity School. While at Vanderbilt, Charles was awarded several grants to conduct and present research in Ethiopia, Great Britain, and Costa Rica.

In 2014 Charles graduated from Vanderbilt with his Masters of Theological Studies and a Graduate Certificate in Black Church Studies. Currently, Charles is pursuing his PhD. in History at Morgan State University in Baltimore, MD, where he serves as the President of the History, African American and Museum Studies Graduate Council (HAFRAM GC). In 2015 Charles was awarded the Lord Baltimore Research Fellowship of the Maryland Historical Society. Charles resides in Baltimore with his wonderful wife Erica and his son Charles “Noah.”

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Chavis, C. (2015, February 11). John F. Hicks (1949- ). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/hicks-john-f-1949/

Source of the Author's Information:

“The President Names Ambassador to Eritrea,” The White House: Office
of the Press Secretary, May 13, 1996,
http://clinton6.nara.gov/1996/05/1996-05-13-hicks-named-ambassador-to-eritea.html
;
Philip Shenon, “U.S. Ambassador to Eritrea Quit Amid Sex Inquiry,
Officials Say,” New York Times, February 27, 2010, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/us/politics/28health.html; “John F. Hicks, “The International University of Gran-Bassam Foundation, https://iugbfoundation.org/john-f-hicks/.

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