Fellowships

International Affairs Fellowships

The 2006–2007 International Affairs Fellows were:

Alyssa C. Ayres
Center for the Advanced Study of India, University of Pennsylvania
“In Other Words: The Challenge of Public Diplomacy in a Changing World”

Jarrett N. Blanc
International Foundation for Election Systems
“Elections During Conflict”

Reuben E. Brigety, II
George Mason University
“Deriving Strategic Influence from Humanitarian and Developmental Assistance”

Michelle D. Gavin
Office of Senator Ken Salazar
“The Implications of Youth Bulge for U.S. Foreign Policy”

Vanessa W. Golding
U.S. Department of State
“Redefining U.S. Democracy and Human Rights Policy: Enabling a Pro-Active Approach to Accountabilty and Transitional Justice”

Prem G. Kumar
U.S. Mission to the UN, U.S. Department of State
“Could Turkey Accept an Independent Iraqi Kurdistan?”

Kara C. McDonald
U.S. Department of State
“Interagency and Multilateral Planning for Stabilization, Reconstruction, and Complex Contingencies”

Evan S. Medeiros
RAND Corporation
“Hedging Against the Rise of China”

Carl F. Minzner
Congressional-Executive Commission on China
“A Common Interest: Social Stability in the Sino-U.S. Human Rights and Rule of Law Discourse”

Jonathan S. Spaner
U.S. Coast Guard
“The Framework for a Trade and Security Initiative between the European Union and the United States”

Mala N. Htun*
New School for Social Research
“Gender Equality and the State in Japan”

Frank Jannuzi*
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
“Honor, Fear, and Interest: Avoiding a Zero-sum Game in Sino-Japanese Relations”

A. Maria Toyoda*
Villanova University
“Are Development Banks Still Relevant in an Era of Global Capital?: Lessons from Japan”

* International Affairs Fellow in Japan, sponsored by Hitachi, Ltd.