Prior to his tenure at Johns Hopkins SAIS, Gavin was a Professor of Political Science at MIT, where he also served as the inaugural Frank Stanton Chair in Nuclear Security Policy Studies. Before joining MIT, he taught at the University of Texas from 2000 to 2013. While there, he was named the Tom Slick Professor of International Affairs at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs in 2005, and served as the Director of the Robert S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law. From 2005 until 2010, Gavin directed The American Assembly's multiyear, national initiative, The Next Generation Project: U.S. Global Policy and the Future of International Institutions.[2]
Gavin received his PhD and MA in history from the University of Pennsylvania, a Master of Studies in Modern European History from Oxford and a BA in Political Science from the University of Chicago.[2][3]
Gavin, Francis J. (2004). Gold, dollars, and power : the politics of international monetary relations, 1958-1971. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.[4]
Nuclear Statecraft: History and Strategy in America's Atomic Age (Cornell University Press, 2012)*Lyndon Johnson and the New Global Challenges of the 1960s (edited with Mark Lawrence, Oxford University Press, 2014)
Chaos in the Liberal World Order: The Trump Presidency and International Politics in the Twenty-First Century (edited with Robert Jervis, Joshua Rovner, and Diane Labrosse, Columbia University Press 2018)
Nuclear Weapons and American Grand Strategy (Brookings Institution Press, 2020)
Articles
“Power, Politics, and U.S. Policy in Iran, 1950-1953.” Journal of Cold War Studies, Winter 1999: 58-89
“The Legends of Bretton Woods,” Orbis, Spring 1996, pp. 183–199
“The Myth of Flexible Response: American Strategy in Europe during the 1960s,” International History Review, December 2001: 847-875
“The Gold Battles within the Cold War: American Monetary Policy and the Defense of Europe, 1960-1963,” Diplomatic History, Winter 2002: 61-94
“Blasts from the Past: Nuclear Proliferation and Rogue States Before the Bush Doctrine,” International Security, Winter 2005, pp. 100–135
“History and Policy,” International Journal, Winter 2008
“Same as it ever was: Nuclear Alarmism, Proliferation, and the Cold War,” International Security, Winter 2010, pp. 7–37
“Politics, History and the Ivory Tower-Policy Gap in the Nuclear Proliferation Debate,” Journal of Strategic Studies, August 2012, pp. 573–600
“History, Security Studies, and the July Crisis,” Journal of Strategic Studies, Volume 37, Issue 2, 2014, pp. 319–331
“What If? The Historian and the Counterfactual,” Security Studies, Volume 24, Issue 3, 2015
“Strategies of Inhibition: U.S. Grand Strategy, the Nuclear Revolution, and Nonproliferation,” International Security vol. 40, No. 1, summer 2015, Pages 9–46
"Rethinking the Bomb: Nuclear Weapons and American Grand Strategy,” Texas National Security Review, vol. 2, no. 1, winter 2019
Zeiler, Thomas W. (September 2005), The International History Review, 27 (3): 685–687, JSTOR40109664{{citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
Mattox, John Mark (July–August 2013), "Review", Military Review, 93 (4)
Siracusa, J. M. (August 2013), Journal of American History, 100 (2): 598–599, doi:10.1093/jahist/jat292{{citation}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)