The 2001–2002 International Affairs Fellows were:
Jon B. Alterman
U.S. Institute of Peace
“Iraq for the Long Term”
Peter Andreas
Reed College
“Contraband Capitalism: Transnational Crime in the Age of Globalization”
Susan F. Bryant
U.S. Military Academy
“Northeast Asian Security After the DMZ: A Recommendation for a Multi-lateral Security”
Aaron Friedberg*
Princeton University
“The U.S.- Japan-PRC Strategic “Triangle” in the 21st Century”
Stephen Grand
German Marshall Fund of the U.S.
“Creating Liberal Democracies: The Role of Civic Organizations in Democratic Consolidation”
Elizabeth Guran*
U.S. General Accounting Office
“Japan's Role in an Asia-Pacific Security Community”
Michael Lynn
University of California, San Francisco
“Infectious Diseases and Foreign Policy: Case Studies on Russia and India”
Xiabo Lu*
Columbia University
“Political Economy of Regulatory Reform in Japan”
Stewart M. Patrick
New York University
“Investing in Peace: Improving Multilateral Cooperation in Reconstruction and Peace-Building Operations”
Nigel Purvis
U.S. Department of State
“Toward a Bipartisan Energy and Environmental Security Policy ”
Stephen M. Saideman
Texas Tech University
“For Kin or Country? Understanding the Conditions Causing of Constraining Irredentism”
Amy Searight
Northwestern University
“Electoral Cycles and Political Dynamics of U.S.-Japan Trade”
Brad Setser
U.S. Department of the Treasury
“A Framework for Incorporating Security Concerns into the Management of Financial Crises”
Zachary Shore
Oxford Analytica
“After Milosevic: Containing Nationalism While Promoting Democracy in Yugoslavia”
Lawrence Spinetta
U.S. Air Force
“Military Intervention in Humanitarian Crises: Maximizing Synergies with the UN and NGOs”
John Tuman*
University of Nevada
“Japan’s Official Development Assistance Policy in Latin America: Implications for U.S.-Japan Relations”
* International Affairs Fellow in Japan, sponsored by Hitachi, Ltd.
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