Stuart Beck

His Excellency
Stuart Beck
Palauan Ambassador to Oceans and Seas
In office
August 2013  February 29, 2016
Leader Tommy Remengesau
Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon
Palauan Ambassador to the United Nations
In office
2003–2013
Succeeded by Caleb T. O. Otto
Personal details
Born Stuart Jay Beck
(1946-12-23)December 23, 1946
Manhattan, New York
Died February 29, 2016(2016-02-29) (aged 69)
Manhattan, New York
Nationality American
Honorary Palauan
Spouse(s) Ebiltulik Beck (m. 1983; 4 children)
Alma mater Harvard University
Yale Law School

Stuart Jay Beck (December 23, 1946 – February 29, 2016) was an American law practitioner and a diplomat for Palau. As a lawyer he helped negotiate the Compact of Free Association, which established Palau as an independent nation in free association with the United States in 1994. For his contributions to Palau, he was granted honorary citizenship.[1] In 2003, he accepted the post for Palau's first Permanent Representative to the United Nations.[2] He served continuously in this position until 2013, at which time he was appointed as Palau’s first ever United Nations Ambassador for Oceans and Seas. In addition to that position, Beck Co-Chaired [(with Amir Dossal) the Sustainable Oceans Alliance, an organization dedicated to the adoption by the General Assembly of a Sustainable Development Goal on Oceans.

Education and early career

Born in Manhattan, New York, to Martin F. Beck and the former Lorraine Hills, Beck was raised in Brooklyn and Lawrence, Nassau County, New York, and attended Woodmere Academy.[3]

Beck was educated at Harvard University (AB, 1968) and Yale Law School (JD, 1971). Beck’s first career move following Yale Law School (1971 through 1977) was to work as an Associate for a private law practice in Washington D.C. and New York City, which involved primarily civil and criminal litigation. After this time, Beck went on to co-found and preside as President of Granite Broadcasting Corporation (1988-2004), a diversified portfolio of network-affiliated television stations throughout the United States. In 1981, Beck also achieved Partner at Richenthal, Birnbaum and Beck. He served at the firm until 1988.

Personal life

While working with Palau, Beck met his future wife Ebiltulik, a native of Palau, who is the mother of their four children. He lived in Bronxville, New York and then Brooklyn, New York.[3] On March 1, 2016, Beck died at the age of 69 from renal cancer.[3][4] [5]

Political biography

As Chief Counsel for the Palau Political Status Commission (1977-1981), H.E. Beck negotiated the decolonization of Palau from the last United Nations trusteeship to a sovereign nation, organized a constitutional convention, negotiated a Compact of Free Association with the United States, and recruited John Kenneth Galbraith to serve as Palau’s economic advisor.

While Ambassador and Permanent Representative, Beck spearheaded United Nations initiatives to stop bottom trawling and shark finning, among others.[6] He founded Ambassadors for Responsibility on Climate Change (ARC) and successfully advanced a resolution to treat climate change as a security issue, prompting a Security Council debate on the topic. In August 2013, Beck relinquished his post as Permanent Representative and was appointed by President Tommy Remengesau as Palau's first ever Ambassador to the Oceans and Seas, with a mandate to initiate essential change at the international level for protection of the marine environments of the world. Ambassador Beck was a visiting lecturer at Yale Law School in 2012, co-teaching a course entitled "Climate Change and the International Court of Justice".

Academic awards

United Nations initiatives and achievements

References

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