[Contents]
[USIP Home Page]
Announcing New Fellows
The Institute's board of directors has selected
the 1996-97 senior fellows (resident awards) and peace scholars (nonresident dissertation awards) in the Jennings
Randolph Program for International Peace. The award recipients and their topics are listed below.
SENIOR FELLOWS
Hussein M. Adam, Department of Political Science, College of the
Holy Cross--"Rethinking the Somali Political Experience"
Kevin Avruch, Department of Anthropology, George Mason University--"Discourses of
Culture in Conflict Resolution"
Harley D. Balzer, Department of Government, Georgetown University--"The Middle Class and
Prospects for Democracy in Russia"
Jian Chen, Department of History, Southern Illinois University-- "Revolution and
Power: Mao's China Encounters the World"
Georgi M. Derluguian, Department of Sociology, Northwestern University--
"Sources of the Chechen Conflict"
Dusko Doder, Balkans correspondent, The European--"Reconstructing the Balkans
after Yugoslavia's Dissolution and Civil War"
Iain Guest, Senior Fellow, Refugee Policy Group--"Post-Conflict Reconstruction:
Bosnia in Comparative Perspective"
Paul J. Hare, U.S. Special Envoy to Angola--"Making and Implementing Peace in Angola"
Beth A. Simmons, Department of Political Science, University of California,
Berkeley--"Compliance Without Enforcement: The Rule of Law in International Relations"
Anara Tabyshalieva, Director, Kyrgyz Peace Research Center--"Kyrgyzstan: The Way
to Ethnic and Religious Peace"
Marvin Weinbaum, Department of Political Science, University of Illinois--"Markets and
Democracy in the Muslim Polity"
David S. Yost, Department of National Security Affairs, Naval Postgraduate
School--"France and International Security"
PEACE SCHOLARS
Zachary Abuza, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,
Tufts University--"Coping With China: Vietnamese Elite Responses to an Emerging Superpower"
Katherine Burns, Department of Political Science, MIT--"Subnational
Power and Multilateral Cooperation in Northeast Asia"
Kathleen Collins, Department of Political Science, Stanford
University--"Post-Soviet Political Transitions in Central Asia"
Susan Cross, Department of Psychology, Harvard University--"Beyond
Trial and Error: The Role of Evaluation in Improving Track II Interventions"
Jaleh Dashti-Gibson, Department of Government, University of
Notre Dame--"Sharpening the Bite: A Framework for Monitoring Multilateral Economic Sanctions"
Alan Emery, Department of Sociology, University of Southern California--"The
National Party in the Democratic Transformation of South African Politics, 1976-91"
Melissa Ann Fuller, Department of Political Science,
UCLA--"Nations Dividing: Ethnic Conflict and its Democratic Management"
Janet Lord, National Law Center, George Washington
University--"Remedies Under International Human Rights Law"
Vjekoslav Perica, Department of History, University of
Minnesota--"The Making of the Post-Yugoslav Nations: Church-Sponsored
Political Mobilization in the Former Yugoslavia, 1965-95"
Todd Perry, Department of Government and Politics,
University of Maryland--"The Origins and Implementation of the 1992 Nuclear Suppliers Group"
David Schimmelpenninck, Department of History,
Yale University--" 'Ex Oriente Lux': Ideologies of Empire and Russia's Far East, 1895-1904"
Paul Silverstein, Department of Anthropology,
University of Chicago--"Trans-Politics: Islam, Berberity, and the French Nation-State"
Christopher Tennant, Department of Anthropology,
Harvard University--"Mayas Going Home: A Study of a Multi-Ethnic New Community in Guatemala"
Monica Toft, Department of Political
Science, University of Chicago--"The Geography of Ethnic Conflict"
Hugo van der Merwe, Institute for Conflict Analysis and
Resolution, George Mason University--"Reconciliation in South Africa: The Role of the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission"
© 1996 United States Institute of Peace