Ambassador Francis Deng, Sudan expert, joins the MIT Center for International Studies

Ambassador Deng awarded CIS Wilhelm Fellowship
May 1, 2006

CAMBRIDGE, MA---Francis Mading Deng, Research Professor of International Politics, Law and Society and Director of the Center for Displacement Studies at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C., joined MIT's Center for International Studies (CIS) on July 1, 2006, as the Center's second Robert E. Wilhelm Fellow. He will be in residence at CIS for one year. 

Ambassador Deng, a Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the Kluge Center of the Library of Congress, is a leading expert on the crisis in Darfur . He served from 1992-2004 as the Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General on Internally Displaced Persons, with the rank of Under-Secretary-General. In addition, he is a scholar of indigenous cultures and the role of tradition in development, the politics and conflicts of identity in the Sudan , conflict management and the challenges of nation building in Africa , and the global crisis of internal displacement. 

Ambassador Deng served as Sudan 's Ambassador to Canada, the Scandinavian countries and the United States , and was the Sudan's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs. He resigned from Sudan's foreign service in 1983 to protest that country's growing orientation toward Islamic fundamentalism.

"Francis Deng is one of the world's leading diplomats, an unusual combination of practitioner and theorist. At the U.N., he helped revolutionize the global responsibility for human security," said John Tirman, Executive Director of CIS. "We are honored and delighted that he's joining us here at the Center."

Ambassador Deng has been involved in numerous peace efforts and has collaborated with prominent mediators, including President Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria and former U.S. President Jimmy Carter. He is the author of several books about the Dinka of Sudan, and has written or co-authored numerous other volumes, including: Protecting the Dispossessed: A Challenge for the International Community; Conflict Resolution in Africa; Masses in Flight: the Crisis of Internal Displacement; Human Rights in Africa; and Forsaken People: Case Studies of the Internally Displaced.

The one-year Robert E. Wilhelm Fellowship is awarded by MIT's Center for International Studies to individuals who have held senior positions in public life. Wilhelm Fellows come to CIS with an intellectual project to be accomplished and collaborate with MIT faculty members in research and/or teaching.  

ABOUT THE CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
The Center for International Studies (CIS) supports interna­tional research and education at MIT. It is the home of MIT’s Security Studies Program; the MIT International Science & Technology Initiative, its pioneering global education program; the Program on Emerging Technologies; and seminars and research on migration, South Asia politics, the Middle East, cybersecurity, nuclear weapons, and East Asia. The Center has traditionally been aligned with the social sciences while also working with MIT’s premier science and engineering scholars. CIS produces research that creatively addresses global issues while helping to educate the next generation of global citizens.