Affiliated Scholars | Visiting Scholars, 2004-2005
Erin Black
University of Toronto, Canada
Ms. Black is a recipient of a Canada-US Fulbright award for her research project entitled "Debating America's Place in the Global Arena, 1965-1974." Ms. Black is a Ph.D. Student at the Department of History, University of Toronto. Her focus is on the history of international relations, particularly the history of American foreign policy.
September 2004 – May 2005
Dr. Philip Davies
Brunel University, United Kindgom
Dr. Davies is a lecturer in the School of International Science, Brunel University, United Kingdom. He was awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship to conduct research on "Comparative Analysis of Intelligence in the UK and USA." At Brunel University, Dr. Davies teaches undergraduate courses in international relations and also has established the Brunel Centre for Intelligence and Security Studies (BCISS).
September 2004 – December 2004
Dr. Gu Ho Eom
Hanyang University, Republic of Korea
Dr. Eom is chairperson of the Russian Studies Department at the Graduate School of International Studies, Hanyang University, Korea. Dr. Eom is the first Korean to receive a doctoral degree from Moscow State University. During his stay at the Institute, Dr. Eom will continue to do research on Russian economy, in particular the role of government in transition economies. Dr. Eom plans to use the University library as well as other available resources in Washington for his research.
January 2005 – March 2006
Andreas Goldthau
Free University, Berlin, Germany
Mr. Goldthau is a Ph.D. Student in the Political and Social Sciences Faculty at the Free University in Berlin, Germany. During his stay at the Institute, Mr. Goldthau will do research on his Ph.D. dissertation on the political economy of reform politics in Russia. Mr. Goldthau is part of the ongoing exchange of students and scholars between the Elliott School and Free University.
October 2004 – December 2004
Rebecca Katz
Princeton University, USA
Ms. Katz is a Ph.D. student at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and the Office of Population Research, Princeton University. During her stay at the Institute Ms. Katz will be working on her Ph.D. dissertation titled "Yellow Rain Revisited: Lessons Learned from Chemical and Biological Weapons Investigations." Her areas of study are biological and chemical warfare, demography, infectious disease epidemiology, national security policy and refugee health.
August 2004 – December 2004
Merve Kavakci – Visiting Professor/Scholar
Ms. Merve Kavakci is a lecturer on culture and international affairs at the Elliott School of International Affairs. A former Member of Parliament, Ms. Kavakci is one of the pioneers in the women's political movement in Turkey in the 1990s. Her main expertise is in the area of democratization of Muslim society and the role of religion in secular Muslim states. She has authored numerous articles, the most recent one appearing in Foreign Policy "Headscarf Heresy." Also her first book, Basortusuz Demokrasi (Scarfless Democracy) (Istanbul: Timas Publications), was published in February 2004.
Congressional Briefing: Commission on Cooperation and Security in Europe, April 12, 2005 (460 KB)
Testimony: United Nations Commission on Human Rights, March 23, 2005 (25 KB)
September 2004 – May 2005
Dr. Se-Eun Kwon
Kyung Hee University, Republic of Korea
Dr. Kwon is an Assistant Professor at Kyung Hee University in the Department of Political Science, where he teaches courses on post-Soviet politics and Russian regional politics and government. During AY 2004-2005, Dr. Kwon will be on sabbatical leave from Kyung Hee University and will be doing research on political transformation in Russia.
September 2004 – May 2005
Dr. Johan Lembke
Adjunct Professor/Visiting Scholar - Sweden
Dr. Lembke was a visiting scholar and adjunct professor at the George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs (ESIA) since the fall of 2001. In 2002–2003, Dr. Lembke worked as a full-time consultant at the Embassy of Sweden in Washington, D.C. In early 2003, Edward Elgar published Dr. Lembke's book in the United States entitled Competition for Technological Leadership: EU Policy for High Technology. His post-doctoral research interests focus on transatlantic relations, politics of high technology, and the Baltic Sea region in international affairs. Dr. Lembke became director of Texas A & M University's European Union Center in May 2005.
September 2004 – May 2005
Dr. Roman Malskyy
Ivan Franco National Unversity, Ukraine
Dr. Roman Malskyy is Associate Professor in the Department of Post Graduate Studies at the Ivan Franko National University, Lviv, Ukraine. During his stay at the Institute Dr. Malskyy will be examining relations between external and internal economic policies as an element of commercial diplomacy. Dr. Malskyy is part of the ongoing scholar exchange sponsored by the Petrach Endowment.
January 2005 – May 2005
Teodor Marijanovic
Respekt Weekly, Czech Republic
Mr. Marijanovic has been selected as a Fulbright/American Political Science Association (APSA) Congressional Fellow for 2004-2005. Mr. Marijanovic is respected journalist, currently serving as Foreign Desk Head of the Respekt Weekly paper. Previously he worked for BBC and Associate Press. During his stay at the Institute Mr. Marijanovic will start to do research on "the future of transatlantic relations" focusing on factors that influence U.S. foreign policy towards Europe. He will finish off his fellowship on Capitol Hill working as a Legislative Assistant.
September 2004 – November 2004
Sutayut Osornprasop
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Mr. Osornprasop is a Ph.D. student in the Department of History at University of Cambridge, United Kingdom. While at the Institute Mr. Osornprasop will be conducting mainly archival research at the National Archives (College Park, Maryland), Library of Congress, Lyndon Johnson Presidential Library (Austin, Texas). The information he gains from the archival research will be used for his Ph.D. dissertation titled: "Thailand's involvement in the Vietnam War, the Secret War in Laos and the Conflicts in Cambodia (1962-1975)."
January 2005 – May 2005
Olivier Palluault
University of Paris, France
Mr. Palluault is a Ph.D. student in Political Science at the University of Paris (Pantheon-Assas). During his stay at the Institute Mr. Pallualut will be working on his dissertation titled, "Critical Infrastructure Protection Policy in the United States and Its Impact on France and the United Kingdom." Mr. Palluault will compare homeland security initiatives on policies in France, in the UK and in the US.
September 2004 – May 2005
Dr. Priscilla Roberts
Fulbright Fellow – Hong Kong
Dr. Priscilla Roberts is a lecturer in history at the University of Hong Kong and director of the Center of American Studies. Dr. Roberts received a 12-month Fulbright grant. The title of her project is "The Origins and Impact of the Twentieth Century U.S. Foreign Policy Establishment, 1914 to the Vietnam War." Dr. Roberts intends to carry out intensive research in collections in the Library of Congress and the National Archives, focusing upon the emergence from World War I onwards of a U.S. foreign policy establishment, and its influence and role in moving the twentieth-century United States towards internationalist and "Atlanticist" policies. She is particularly interested in the public-private policymaking nexus.
June 2004 – December 2004
Hryhoriy Shamborovskyy
Ivan Franco National University, Ukraine
Mr. Hryhoriy Shamborovskyy is an assistant professor in the Department of International Economic Relations, Ivan Franko National University, Lviv, Ukraine. During his stay at the Institute, Mr. Shamborovskyy will be doing research titled " Social-economic efficiency of integration processes in North America and Europe: NAFTA and EU." Mr. Shamborovskyy is part of the ongoing scholar exchange sponsored by the Petrach Endowment.
January 2005 – May 2005
Visiting Faculty 2004-2005
Dr. Taras Kuzio
University of Toronto, Canada
Dr. Kuzio was appointed by the Elliott School as a Visiting Assistant Professor of International Affairs for the 2004-2005 academic year. Dr. Kuzio was previously Adjunct Professor in the Department of political science at the University of Toronto, Canada. He is one of the leading experts on contemporary Ukraine and has taught several courses that deal with Post-Communist transition of Ukraine as well as NATO and EU Enlargement in the Post-Communist world. In 2004-2005, Dr. Kuzio is teaching four courses (two each semester) on Ukraine and Russia in broad context that also includes other parts of former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
September 2004 – May 2005
Visiting Scholars 2006-2007
Visiting Scholars 2005-2006
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